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Adela Rogers St. Johns (1894–1988)

Auteur de The Honeycomb

14+ oeuvres 329 utilisateurs 3 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Œuvres de Adela Rogers St. Johns

The Honeycomb (1969) 79 exemplaires
Final Verdict (1962) 74 exemplaires
Tell No Man (1966) 65 exemplaires
Some Are Born Great (1974) 39 exemplaires
First Step Up Toward Heaven (1959) 8 exemplaires
Affirmative prayer in action (1958) 7 exemplaires
The single standard (1928) 3 exemplaires
How to write a story and sell it (1969) 3 exemplaires
A Free Soul (1939) 2 exemplaires
The Skyrocket 2 exemplaires
Government Girl [1943 film] (2014) — Screenwriter — 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
St. Johns, Adela Rogers
Autres noms
Rogers, Adela Nora (birth)
Date de naissance
1894-05-20
Date de décès
1988-08-10
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Los Angeles, California, USA
Lieu du décès
Arroyo Grande, California, USA
Lieux de résidence
Washington, D.C., USA
Professions
journalist
novelist
screenwriter
Organisations
San Francisco Examiner
Photoplay
Prix et distinctions
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1970)
Agent
Edith Haggard
Courte biographie
Answers.com: The daughter of a San Francisco criminal lawyer who was good friends with publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst, Adela Rogers got her first job at age 19 working as a cub reporter for Hearst's San Francisco Examiner. She eventually rose to become one of the paper's ace reporters and was on hand for some of her era's biggest stories. She also worked closely with the influential Photoplay magazine and was once hailed as "Mother Confessor of Hollywood." She worked at MGM for a time as a story consultant and script doctor. Some of her stories served as the basis for other studios' films. She became Adela Rogers St. Johns when she married Ivan (Ike) St. Johns in 1913 -- the couple had two children.

Membres

Critiques

5529. Final Verdict, by Adela Rogers St. John (read 3 Feb 2018) This book is called a biography of Earl Rogers, flamboyant California lawyer, and is written by his daughter. I usually avoid biographies by the subject's relative since we can be sure the relative will slant the story to show the subject in the best light. This biography does that but I have a greater quarrel with it in that it contains not a single mention of a year. So we have to guess as to the time of the various events told about in the often grandiloquent but stirring prose. So I went to Wikipedia to get the facts which enable one to place in time the events related in the book.. Earl Rogers was born in Los Angeles on 18 Nov 1869 and was admitted to the bar in 1897. He had many stirring and high profile case, only about a dozen of which are told about in the book. And the account of those cases is of high quality and of great interest. Maybe his daughter, who was with him in many of the cases as fervent onlooker, hypes his performance but the many favorable results of the trials show that he was a lawyer of daring and great skill. (Supposedly Erle Stanley Gardner modelled his creation, Perry Mason, on Rogers.) But the book also tells of the tragic personal life of Rogers--his hellish life with the author's mother, who Rogers divorced three times, his struggle with alcoholism, the death of his second wife from the flu, apparently in 1918 (no year is ever mentioned in the book, of course) and Rogers's wasteful spending habits which apparently ended with him dying in poverty on 22 Feb 1922. Rogers defended Clarence Darrow when Darrow was charged with jury tampering and despite the efforts of Darrow to seek to justify the McNamaras's horrendous 1910 bombing of the Los Angeles Times building in which 21 were killed Rogers managed to get Darrow acquitted, the jury being out only 28 minutes. Since Darrow also made a closing argument in the case (lasting apparently 3 days!) Darrow claimed he won the case whereas he apparently almost lost it. The author of the book has nothing good to say for Darrow and the book paints a very unflattering picture of him. I greatly enjoyed reading this book, even though it has the flaws I mention.… (plus d'informations)
½
1 voter
Signalé
Schmerguls | 1 autre critique | Feb 3, 2018 |
Earl Rogers was a ground-breaking criminal lawyer in the early 1900s in California. He was the first to use ballistics to prove his clients' innocence, the first to use re-enactments in court and is generally credited with being one of the best trial lawyers in America.

This biography is written by his daughter, Adela (whom he called Nora), some years after his death. Adela was a constant companion to her father while growing up, seldom attending formal school and never leaving with her mother through three divorces and several separations. Her love for her father shines through the book, but she has made a real attempt to be truthful, showing her father's weaknesses as well as his strengths. Well written...it often reads like a crime novel...this book provides a historical perspective on the law as we know it today.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
LynnB | 1 autre critique | Apr 10, 2015 |
Lively and controversial tales of some of the extraordinary women of our times. A book by Adela Rogers St. Johns about the great women she has known in her fifty-odd years of covering the news.
 
Signalé
melsbks | Oct 17, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
2
Membres
329
Popularité
#72,116
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
3
ISBN
23
Favoris
1

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