Dorothy Duncan

American writer and artist (1903 – 1957)
Dorothy Duncan
Born1903 (1903)
DiedApril 22, 1957(1957-04-22) (aged 53)
OccupationWriter (novelist)
NationalityAmerican
Period20th century
GenreHistory, fiction

Dorothy Duncan (1903 – April 22, 1957), American writer and artist, won the Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction in 1946 for her book Partner in Three Worlds.

Born in East Orange, New Jersey in 1903 to Dorothy and Edwin L. Duncan, Dorothy Duncan grew up in the Chicago area and suffered from rheumatic fever which limited her physical abilities in later years.[1] She earned a Bachelor of Science at Northwestern University in 1925 and worked in a variety of small businesses in Chicago.[1] During a return journey from Europe in 1932, Duncan met Hugh MacLennan on board the SS Pennland.[1] They married in 1936 and settled in Montreal.[1]

Duncan wrote several semi-autographical works describing her encounters with Canadian culture before her health began to limit her activities in the late 1940s. Her award-winning Partner in Three Worlds was a biography of Jan Rieger, a Czech-Canadian soldier who fought in both World Wars.[2]

Duncan died on Easter Day in 1957 of cancer.[3]

Works

  • You Can Live in an Apartment (1939)
  • Here's to Canada! (1941)
  • Bluenose: A Portrait of Nova Scotia (1942)
  • Partner in Three Worlds (1944)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Slowe, Martha (2002). Kathyrn Carter (ed.). The small details of life: twenty diaries by women in Canada, 1830-1996 (Dorothy Duncan MacLennan 1902-1957). University of Toronto Press.
  2. ^ "Partner in Three Worlds by Dorothy Duncan". Kirkus Reviews. October 11, 1944.
  3. ^ Dagg, Anne I. (2001). The Feminine Gaze: A Canadian Compendium of Non-Fiction Women Authors and Their Books, 1836-1945. Waterloo, Ont: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.

External links

  • Works by Dorothy Duncan at Faded Page (Canada)
  • v
  • t
  • e
1930s
  • Thomas Beattie Roberton, TBR: Newspaper Pieces (1936)
  • Stephen Leacock, My Discovery of the West (1937)
  • John Murray Gibbon, Canadian Mosaic (1938)
  • Laura Salverson, Confessions of an Immigrant's Daughter (1939)
1940s
  • J. F. C. Wright, Slava Bohu (1940)
  • Emily Carr, Klee Wyck (1941)
  • Bruce Hutchison, The Unknown Country (1942)
  • Edgar McInnis, The Unguarded Frontier (1942)
  • E. K. Brown, On Canadian Poetry (1943)
  • John Robins, The Incomplete Anglers (1943)
  • Dorothy Duncan, Partner in Three Worlds (1944)
  • Edgar McInnis, The War: Fourth Year (1944)
  • Ross Munro, Gauntlet to Overlord (1945)
  • Evelyn M. Richardson, We Keep a Light (1945)
  • Frederick Phillip Grove, In Search of Myself (1946)
  • Arthur R. M. Lower, Colony to Nation (1946)
  • William Sclater, Haida (1947)
  • Robert MacGregor Dawson, The Government of Canada (1947)
  • Thomas Head Raddall, Halifax, Warden of the North (1948)
  • C. P. Stacey, The Canadian Army, 1939-1945 (1948)
  • Hugh MacLennan, Cross-country (1949)
  • Robert MacGregor Dawson, Democratic Government in Canada (1949)
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
  • Jeffrey Simpson, Discipline of Power: The Conservative Interlude and the Liberal Restoration (1980)
  • George Calef, Caribou and the Barren-Land (1981)
  • Christopher Moore, Louisbourg Portraits: Life in an Eighteenth- Century Garrison Town (1982)
  • Jeffery Williams, Byng of Vimy: General and Governor General (1983)
  • Sandra Gwyn, The Private Capital: Ambition and Love in the Age of Macdonald and Laurier (1984)
  • Ramsay Cook, The Regenerators: Social Criticism in Late Victorian English Canada (1985)
  • Northrop Frye, Northrop Frye on Shakespeare (1986)
  • Michael Ignatieff, The Russian Album (1987)
  • Anne Collins, In the Sleep Room (1988)
  • Robert Calder, Willie: The Life of W. Somerset Maugham (1989)
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
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