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Kathrene Sutherland Gedney Pinkerton (1887–1967)

Auteur de Wilderness wife

18+ oeuvres 88 utilisateurs 5 critiques

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 Kathrene Sutherland Gedney Pinkerton

Wilderness wife (1939) 28 exemplaires
Three's a Crew (1940) 21 exemplaires
Fox Island (1942) 7 exemplaires
Hidden Harbour (1951) 5 exemplaires
Adventure North (1940) 5 exemplaires
Farther North 3 exemplaires
Bright with silver (1947) 3 exemplaires
Second Meeting (1777) 3 exemplaires
Windigo 2 exemplaires
Peddler's crew (1954) 2 exemplaires
Tomorrow Island (1960) 1 exemplaire
Year of enchantment 1 exemplaire
Tomorrow Island 1 exemplaire
The silver strain (1946) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Pinkerton, Kathrene Sutherland Gedney
Autres noms
Pinkerton, Kathrene
Date de naissance
1887-06-09
Date de décès
1967
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Lieux de résidence
Canada
Atikokan, Ontario, Canada
Études
University of Wisconsin
Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy
Professions
children's book author
novelist
social worker
autobiographer
magazine writer
Relations
Pinkerton, Robert Eugene (husband)
Courte biographie
Kathrene Pinkerton, née Gedney, was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 1909, she graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a BA degree, and went on to graduate work at the Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy. She spent her early career in social work focused on public health issues such as tuberculosis outbreaks in rural areas. In 1911, she married Robert E. Pinkerton, a newspaper writer. With the proceeds of a novelette they wrote together, the couple traveled to the wilds of northern Ontario and built a small cabin eight miles from the nearest village, which could only be reached by canoe in summer and by dogsled in winter. There they settled down to their writing, at first selling articles on camping to outdoor magazines. They only emerged from the back country briefly for the birth of their daughter.

In 1917, the family moved back to the USA and traveled extensively by auto, living in the Rocky Mountains, the Sierra Nevadas, and on the mesas of the Southwest. In 1924, they began living aboard a 50-foot boat cruising the coasts of British Columbia and Alaska. During this time, Kathrene began to focus on her independent writing, including newspaper and magazine articles, adult and juvenile fiction; however, she's best known for her autobiographical books, Wilderness Wife (1939), Three's a Crew (1940), and Two Ends to Our Shoestring (1941).

Membres

Critiques

This novel of a white family moving to the far north of Ontario to run a trapline is "a book of its time" (1940) but excuses only go so far, and the casual racism is disturbing in the 21st century. The author's attitude towards the Ojibwe people is even-handed insofar as they are portrayed as balanced characters in the story, but in the mouths of her white characters there are frequent disparaging comments: "You don't want to look like a wild Indian", the mother tells 14 year old Anne, trying to trim her hair before they visit the HBC post. A lot of information about What Indians Are Like is proffered by the HBC man, the government representative who arrives to hand out the $5 per person annual treaty payment, and other white "experts"; one has to suppose the author is expressing viewpoints she finds acceptable because nobody contradicts any of it... and I really never figured out why the dad gave up a job with the government and took his family to the wilderness to live a subsistence life on a trapline, or how that was supposed to help forward his ambition to start a fur farm. No surprise that the Ojibwe paterfamilias already trapping fur in the area wasn't best pleased with the situation.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
muumi | Jan 28, 2022 |
a little slow getting started but she she seems such a warm person that she takes you with her. as with her other book they suddenly stop this thing they seem to love, sell up and? it's hard to find info about her, so..... i wish her daughter would write/had written a memoir.
½
 
Signalé
mahallett | Dec 20, 2014 |
i read a thirty minute condensation in reader's digest.
 
Signalé
mahallett | 2 autres critiques | Sep 4, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
18
Aussi par
1
Membres
88
Popularité
#209,356
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
5
ISBN
6
Langues
1

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