Fotografía de autor

Ruth Doan MacDougall

Autor de The Cheerleader

15 Obras 293 Miembros 8 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Series

Obras de Ruth Doan MacDougall

The Cheerleader (1976) 114 copias
Snowy (1993) 44 copias
Henrietta Snow (2004) 29 copias
One Minus One (2013) 28 copias
Wife and Mother (1976) 12 copias
Aunt Pleasantine (1978) 11 copias
The Flowers of the Forest (1981) 10 copias
Mutual Aid (2009) 5 copias
The Cost of Living (1971) 4 copias
The Lilting House (1965) 4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1939-03-19
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Laconia, New Hampshire, USA
Lugares de residencia
New Hampshire
Educación
Bennington College
Keene State College
Ocupaciones
novelist
travel writer
editor
short story writer
book reviewer
Relaciones
Doan, Daniel (father)
Biografía breve
Ruth Doan MacDougall was born in Laconia, New Hampshire, and raised on her parents' chicken farm in neighboring Belmont. The income from the farm didn't support a family, so when Ruth was three, the Doans moved to Laconia, where her father Daniel Doan got a job at a manufacturing company. Dan gave up farming, but he continued his writing. Ruth later recalled falling asleep each evening listening to "a literary lullaby," the sound of his typewriter as he wrote at night. By the time she was six, Ruth had written her own first story and knew that she, too, was a writer. After graduating from Laconia High School, Ruth attended Bennington College from 1957 to 1959. She then transferred to Keene State College to join her husband, Don MacDougall. They graduated together in 1961. Her novel The Cheerleader, published in 1973, became a national best seller. It was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection, optioned by Twentieth Century Fox, and adapted into an NBC-TV sitcom pilot. Seven sequels in what became "The Snowy" series took took the characters from the 1950s into the 21st century. Her many other novels include One Minus One (1971), republished in 2013 in Nancy Pearl's Book Lust Rediscoveries series. Ruth short stories have appeared in Redbook magazine and have been named winners in the PEN Syndicated Fiction Project. Her articles have been published in Publishers Weekly, the Washington Post, and New Hampshire Magazine. She has reviewed books for the New York Times Book Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Newsday, and other newspapers. After her father's death in 1993, Ruth updated his popular guidebooks, 50 Hikes in the White Mountains and 50 More Hikes in New Hampshire. She also edited his Indian Stream Republic: Settling a New England Frontier, 1785-1842.

Miembros

Reseñas

AUNT PLEASANTINE (1978) was a gift to my late mom from author Ruth Doan MacDougall a dozen or more years ago. Mom loved it and passed it along to us, and I've finally gotten around to reading it, and it was a pure delight. A kind of time capsule snapshot of another time, it's set in a New Hampshire small town and lake side community in the summer of 1975, complete with allusions to gas shortages, Watergate and Nixon's resignation the previous year. But the story is mostly about family and all the complex, sometimes sad and messy relationships that go with it. Pleasantine, a still beautiful octogenarian edged out and cut loose by her two daughters in Florida, has flown back to her native New Hampshire and found refuge with Mary and Bill Emerson, much younger friends (she once babysat for Mary and her sister Connie), and is trying to find a permanent place for her last years. 'Aunt' Pleasantine, now living on a tiny Social Security income, has known wealthy times, divorce, and was also swindled out of a fortune by a charmer, and is now witness to some current family troubles in the Emerson family, where Bill is chafing under the thumb of his tyrannical father in the family boat business. His married brother, Leonard, is a notorious philanderer, and Bill's parents are horrified that he and Mary have chosen not to have children, and especially shocked to learn Bill has had a vasectomy. In short, there's a lot of under-the-radar everyday stuff going on here, and Doan MacDougall (most famous for her novel, THE CHEERLEADER, and its 'Snowy' sequels, but my favorite of her books was WIFE AND MOTHER) manages to craft this family drama and uncovered family secrets all into a very compelling narrative, sometimes hilarious, but often very moving too. I enjoyed it tremendously. Very, very highly recommended.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
… (más)
 
Denunciada
TimBazzett | Jul 14, 2023 |
I think I would have loved this if I had read as a teenager. Being much past that, it was familiar. I believe the author captured all the high school feelings of wanted to be accepted, of fitting in and being popular.
 
Denunciada
dara85 | otra reseña | Sep 15, 2020 |
Emily isn't my favorite protagonist, but discussing her behavior would certainly trigger a lively book group debate. This book, taking place in small-town New Hampshire in the 1960s/70s, could also appeal to readers who like to read for setting.
 
Denunciada
alyssajp | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 29, 2019 |
The only thing I didn't like about One Minus One is the fact that I'll never learn how the main character's life turned out. This book is so well written and the characters are so beautifully drawn that I felt like I knew them all. There isn't a plot, per se, but I'll choose character over action any day. It was superb. I gulped it down.
 
Denunciada
smallwonder56 | 2 reseñas más. | Apr 28, 2015 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
15
Miembros
293
Popularidad
#79,900
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
8
ISBNs
27
Idiomas
1
Favorito
1

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