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Rachel Maddux (1912–1983)

Auteur de Green Kingdom

10+ oeuvres 69 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Œuvres de Rachel Maddux

Oeuvres associées

The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 6th Series (1957) — Contributeur — 141 exemplaires
The Flying Yorkshireman, [and other] novellas (1937) — Contributeur — 6 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Baker, Rachel Maddux
Date de naissance
1912-12-15
Date de décès
1983-11-19
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Wichita, Kansas, USA
Lieu du décès
Tennessee Ridge, Tennessee, USA
Courte biographie
Rachel Maddux was born December 15, 1912 in Wichita. Kansas. She remembers beginning to write at the age of 6 and she completed an entire novel while still a child. Respiratory problems kept Rachel from activity, so she entertained friends with stories. After graduating from the University of Kansas, Rachel attended medical school for two years. Poor health intervened, requiring Rachel to leave school and work several jobs, including an old-fashioned drummer - a traveling saleslady. Rachel was working in Kansas City, Missouri, when she published her first work, a novella called Turnip's Blood, in 1936. actress Katherine Hepburn purchased an option on the rights. Ultimately Turnip's Blood was produced as a television drama in the early 1950s. Rachel Maddux died November 19, 1983. Her autobiography and her collected stories were published posthumously.

1977 The Orchard Children
Harper & Row; 1st edition (1977)

1991 Communication, the Autobiography of Rachel Maddux, and Her Novella, Turnip's Blood (University of Tennessee Press, October 1991)

1992 The Way Things Are: The Stories of Rachel Maddux
University of Tennessee Press; 1st edition (November 1992)

1993 A Walk in the Spring Rain, and the Orchard Children (Rachel Maddux Series, Vol 3, University of Tennessee Press, January 1993)

The Green Kingdom (orignally published 1957) (The Rachel Maddux Series, Vol 4, University of Tennessee Press, March 1993)

Abel's Daughter (originally published, 1960) (The Rachel Maddux Series, Vol 5, University of Tennessee Press, March 1993)

Membres

Critiques

This is an older book...1957...but for the most part, it doesn't matter. I read it in my 20s, and I am rereading it now, thirty years later. It is still a good book, a sad and haunting fantasy. There are books that my mind links together. This book is linked to Jack Finney's Time and Again and Portrait of Jennie by Robert Nathan. It's the "feel" of these stories, a sadness and loss more than the storyline.
 
Signalé
ceilmary | 1 autre critique | Nov 19, 2019 |
I read this book as a young adult and I credit it with my introduction to the world of fantasy. It is truly the most beautiful book I've ever read and will forever remain my most cherished novel, proudly collected piece, and all time favorite! Rachel Maddux weaves a tale of epic proportions. Her character development is tuned to the point where the reader feels as if he knows and loves these cherished family members. Her imagination weaves a world of beauty, longing, desire, mystery, intrigue and suspense. To read The Green Kingdom is to awaken the imagination of the soul.

Rachel Maddux is to fantasy what Mary Shelley is to horror.

From the Publisher: The Green Kingdom itself is a metaphor for whatever circumstances can make a person feel some control over fate. To live in the Green Kingdom is to inhabit what Maddux calls "the climate of potentiality," and to read The Green Kingdom is an intense experience in which we imagine our own responses to this land that Maddux so carefully delineates.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Lame | 1 autre critique | Jul 27, 2007 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
10
Aussi par
2
Membres
69
Popularité
#250,752
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
2
ISBN
13

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