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Theodora Du Bois (1890–1986)

Auteur de Solution T-25

44+ oeuvres 167 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Theodora Du Bois

Solution T-25 (1951) 17 exemplaires
Freedom's Way (1953) 12 exemplaires
Tiger Burning Bright (1964) 10 exemplaires
The High King's daughter, (1965) 9 exemplaires
The Emerald Crown (1955) 8 exemplaires
Rich Boy, Poor Boy (1961) 6 exemplaires
Shannon Terror (1964) 6 exemplaires
Death Is Late to Lunch (1941) 6 exemplaires
Death Dines Out (1939) 5 exemplaires
The Devil's Spoon (1930) 5 exemplaires
The Face of Hate (1948) 5 exemplaires
The Cavalier's Corpse (1952) 4 exemplaires
The Body Goes Round and Round (1942) 4 exemplaires
The Footsteps (1947) 4 exemplaires
Diana's Feathers (1935) 4 exemplaires
Seeing Red (1954) 4 exemplaires
Rogue's Coat (1949) 3 exemplaires
Heroes in Plenty (1945) 3 exemplaires
Money, Murder and the McNeills (1949) 3 exemplaires
Death Wears a White Coat (1938) 3 exemplaires
The Wild Duck Murders (1943) 3 exemplaires
Sarah Hall's Sea God (1952) 3 exemplaires
The Case of the Perfumed Mouse (1944) 3 exemplaires
Armed with a New Terror (1936) 3 exemplaires
The Devil and Destiny (1948) 3 exemplaires
The Listener 3 exemplaires
We Merrily Put to Sea (1950) 2 exemplaires
Death Sails in a High Wind (1945) 2 exemplaires
The McNeills chase a ghost (1941) 2 exemplaires
Murder Strikes an Atomic Unit (1946) 2 exemplaires
Tiger Burning Bright 2 exemplaires
Death Tears a Comic Strip (1938) 2 exemplaires
Death Comes To Tea. (1940) 2 exemplaires
The love of Fingin O'Lea (1957) 2 exemplaires
Captive of Rome (1962) 2 exemplaires
Fowl Play (1951) 2 exemplaires
Banjo the crow 1 exemplaire
Brott i sol 1 exemplaire
Farlig seglats 1 exemplaire
Diana Can Do It 1 exemplaire
Brott i vitt 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
McCormick, Theodora Brenton Eliot (birth name)
McCormick, Theodora (alternative publishing name)
Date de naissance
1890-09-14
Date de décès
1986-02-01
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Lieux de résidence
Manhattan, New York, USA
Yonkers, New York, USA
Staten Island, New York, USA
Professions
children's book author
author
Courte biographie
She was born Theodora Brenton Eliot McCormick in Brooklyn in 1890 to Eliot McCormick and Laura Case Brenton McCormick. Du Bois' father died when she was a year old. Laura remarried in 1897 and her second husband, Charles MacDonald (1857-1945), was a lawyer and Wall Street broker. He had a son, Sam (1886-1965), from a previous marriage, and together the couple had one child that survived infancy, Howard (1898-1965). Although Du Bois continued to visit her father's relatives, her stepfather and mother were not on good terms with them. A poor relationship with her stepfather is reflected in Du Bois' writing.



From 1897-1900, the family lived in Manhattan and Du Bois attended the Barnard School for Girls. After moving to Yonkers in 1900, Du Bois attended the Halsted School and received a classical education. She was diagnosed with tuberculosis at 21 and spent several months in a sanatorium. She wrote poetry and plays, including children's plays, and attended the Dartmouth Summer School for Drama in 1916. She co-authored Amateur and Educational Dramatics (1917) with Evelyne Hilliard and Kate Oglebay.

Theodora met Delafield Du Bois in Connecticut in 1917, and they were married the following year. Delafield Du Bois was ten years older than Theodora. He was an electrical engineer but also pursued other research interests. The Du Bois's moved to Dongan Hills on Staten Island. The couple had two children, Theodora in 1919 and Eliot in 1922. Du Bois continued writing short stories and plays. Her first published short story, "Thursday and the King and Queen," was published in Women's Home Companion in 1920 and she continued to publish short stories throughout the 1920's. In 1928, Delafield Du Bois left his job to pursue research and the family went to Europe for 18 months, spending time in Munich, Cambridge, Italy and Ireland. The experiences from this travel informed many of Du Bois' future works.

Du Bois went on to try writing novels and the first, The Devil's Spoon, was published in 1930. The family moved to Connecticut during this period, and Du Bois wrote plays. In 1934, the family moved to New Haven where they lived until Delafield Du Bois' retirement after the end of World War II (1946). Du Bois now began detective writing in earnest. Twenty of her detective stories were published during 1941-1954, and many were translated and published abroad.



On Delafield's retirement the Du Bois's bought a boat, and spent nine months of each of the three successive years sailing. A number of Du Bois' novels are based upon her sailing experiences including Rogue's Coat (1949). The family returned to Dongan Hills on Staten Island but later spent time in Ireland.



Du Bois began to experience professional difficulties during the 1950's. She changed agents early in 1952, leaving Paul R. Reynolds, who had been her agent since the 1910's, and going to McIntosh & Otis. This was partially because a cousin by marriage, Mary Abbot, was a partner in McIntosh & Otis, but also because the Reynolds agency encouraged her to write a historical novel on Ireland, Where the Blackthorn Grows, which was rejected by publishers. There were also problems associated with the publication of Seeing Red (1954). Seeing Red was part of the series of McNeill mystery stories that had begun with Armed with a New Terror (1936). The book was a sequel to Murder Strikes an Atomic Unit (1946), which dealt with the theft of atomic secrets. The plot of Seeing Red involves the appearance of the McNeills as suspects before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Du Bois had been appalled when she had gone to Washington to research and observe the committee and portrayed it negatively in the book. The caused backlash against her and the book's publisher, Doubleday, received angry letters on the issue, although Du Bois was not informed of them at the time due to health problems. Doubleday did not publish any additional McNeill mysteries after this incident, although they had previously published several of Du Bois' books as part of their Crime Club.



Except for Freedom's Way (1953), which made the New York Times Best Seller list, Du Bois's later novels were not particularly successful. Despite these personal and professional setbacks, Du Bois continued writing and the CUNY collection contains several unpublished manuscripts written in her later years.

Membres

Critiques

A fairly good light fantasy novel -- might even call it proto-steampunk. Lin Carter (paraphrasing here) said it was the best James Branch Cabell imitation he knew. I see what he means -- I suspect Du Bois was familiar with at least Cream of the Jest and Something About Eve -- but it mostly lacks Cabell's rarefied style and pessimistic wit. In some ways it's more like a Thorne Smith novel. Enjoyable, unjustly neglected.
½
1 voter
Signalé
Crypto-Willobie | Aug 18, 2015 |
Somewhere in the near future after the end of WWII, the US has been invaded by a foreign country (unspecified, likely Asian) that has blasted nearly all major cities mostly out of existence and killed most Americans. Those who remain alive are roped into slave labor, or agree to serve as collaborators. Attractive women are sent to the invaders homeland. Children are sent to concentration camps for reeducation and indoctrination.

Will the small band of heros, and the absentminded Yale scientist at the secret Tortugas laboratory, develop a new secret weapon that will enable the growing underground resistance to retake the US from its invaders? Will hero John Dean and his fianee Joyce Van Pelt ever have a chance at a normal suburban life? Hmmmm....

I picked this up at "The Place of Forsyth County" a thrift shop in Cumming, which has a small collection of used books. It lived up to my low expectations, but still made for a pleasant read on vacation.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
mathrocks | Sep 21, 2011 |
September 18, 1999
Shannon Terror
Theodora Dubois

Another one from the library sale. It had “WITHDRAWN” stamped on the inside. I love the feeling of getting something few other people have!

Constance and her aunt Mattie are Americans vacationing in Ireland, when their rented boat gives out and they have to seek out help at a nearby isolated castle, which sits on its own little island on the Shannon river. Inside they find a dying man, who has just been shot. He tells them with his dying breath who shot him and why, and all hell breaks loose. An eclectic group of rich people are soon after the women, capturing and locking them in the castle, from which Constance escapes and is chased all the way down the Shannon as she looks for help. Dragged in a few places, but good reading on the whole.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
victorianrose869 | Aug 4, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
44
Aussi par
4
Membres
167
Popularité
#127,264
Évaluation
3.2
Critiques
3
ISBN
4

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