Jean McIlwraith explained

Jean McIlwraith
Birth Date:December 28, 1858
Occupation:Writer (novelist)
Period:19th, 20th century
Genre:Historical fiction, biography

Jean Newton McIlwraith (December 28, 1858 – November 17, 1938) was a Canadian novelist and biographer. Her works include children's books, 1 opera, and historical romances, such as The Curious Career of Roderick Campbell (1901), A Diana of Quebec (1912), and Kinsmen at War (1927).[1]

Biography

McIlwraith was born in 1858 in Hamilton, Canada West. Her parents were Mary Park and Thomas McIlwraith, a noted ornithologist.[2] She attended the Wesleyan Ladies College and studied modern literature through a correspondence program with Queen Margaret College of the University of Glasgow. From 1902 to 1919 she worked in New York City for publishing companies and achieved the position of head reader at Doubleday, Page and Co. In 1919 she returned to Canada to devote her time to writing.[3] She suffered from arteriosclerosis and died from pneumonia in Burlington, Ontario in 1938.[4]

Works

McIlwraith published one opera and several books in the genre of romance and historical fiction. She also published numerous short stories which appeared in magazines such as Harper's, Atlantic Monthly and Cornhill Magazine.[2] [3]

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McIlwraith, Jean Newton (1859–1938) .
  2. Book: The Feminist Companion to Literature in English . Virginia Blain . Isobel Grundy . Patrica Clements . 1990 . United Kingdom . B.T. Batsford . 691–692.
  3. Book: New Women: Short Stories by Canadian Women, 1900-1920 . registration . Sandra Campbell . Lorraine McMullen . 1991 . Ottawa . University of Ottawa Press . 291–292.
  4. Web site: McIlwraith, Jean Newton . Simon Fraser University . 2014.