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Marjorie Benton Cooke (1876–1920)

Autor/a de Bambi

11+ obres 76 Membres 0 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Obres de Marjorie Benton Cooke

Bambi (1914) 50 exemplars
Cinderella Jane (2010) 7 exemplars
The Dual Alliance (2011) 3 exemplars
The cricket (2011) 2 exemplars
The Clutch of Circumstance (1918) 2 exemplars
The Threshold 2 exemplars
Dramatic Episodes (1919) 2 exemplars
Married? 1 exemplars

Obres associades

Sturdy Oak: A Composite Novel (1917) — Col·laborador — 8 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Data de naixement
1876-11-27
Data de defunció
1920-04-26
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
Richmond, Indiana, USA
Lloc de defunció
Manila, Philippinen
Causa de la mort
pneumonia
Llocs de residència
Richmond, Indiana, USA
Chicago, Illinois, USA
New York, New York, USA
Educació
University of Chicago
Professions
Schriftstellerin
playwright
novelist
women's rights activist
suffragist
journalist (mostra-les totes 8)
monologuist
young adult writer
Organitzacions
Heterodoxy
Authors League of America
Women's University Club
Women's Peace Party
Biografia breu
Marjorie Benton Cooke was born in Richmond, Indiana. She attended prep schools in Detroit and Chicago before graduating from the University of Chicago with a bachelor of philosophy degree in 1899. Soon afterwards, she began working as a journalist and by 1902, she was touring the USA giving recitals of her own monologues and comic and dramatic sketches. Many of her monologues were published in booklets, collections, and anthologies. Her debut novel, The Girl Who Lived in the Woods, was published in 1910, followed by a dozen more. She also wrote four one-act plays and a volume of poetry. Her best known work was the novel Bambi, serialized in the American Magazine in 1914 and then published in book form. (This was not the coming of age story of a young deer that was the basis for a blockbuster Disney animated film.) It was a commercial success, with the first edition selling out two weeks before publication, and was adapted into a serialized radio show. Benton Cooke was an active supporter of the women's rights movement, and performed suffragist monologues at more than 100 public gatherings. In 1916, she wrote a chapter of The Sturdy Oak, a round-robin novel that narrated the conversion of an anti-suffragist into a suffragist reformer; other contributors included Dorothy Canfield Fisher and Fannie Hurst, and the book's proceeds went to the suffrage cause. She was a member of the feminist group Heterodoxy as well as the Women's University Club, both located in New York City. She also became an editor and writer for Four Lights, the journal of the New York City chapter of the Women's Peace Party. She died of pneumonia at age 43 in Manila, the Philippines, during an around the world cruise.

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Estadístiques

Obres
11
També de
1
Membres
76
Popularitat
#233,522
Valoració
½ 3.7
ISBN
35

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