Margaret Carver Leighton
Margaret Carver Leighton (December 20, 1896 - June 19, 1987) was an American children's writer.
Education
Leighton was born in Oberlin, Ohio. She attended schools in Cambridge, Massachusetts; France; and Switzerland while her father was on sabbatical in those countries. [1] She obtained her B.A. degree from Radcliffe College in 1918.[2]
On May 5, 1921, Margaret married James Herbert Leighton. They had four children: James Herbert, Mary, Thomas Carver, and Sylvia. Leighton's husband died in 1935. The family soon moved to California, where she began to write children's books, inspired by her own children's antics.
Her most famous work is Shelley's Mary: A Life of Mary Godwin Shelley, published in 1973.
She was a member of the Westfield, New Jersey, Board of Education from 1930 to 1934, a member of the Santa Monica Public Library Board of Trustees, the Authors League of America, and P.E.N., serving as president at the Los Angeles center from 1957-1959. [3]
Margaret Carver Leighton died on June 19, 1987, in Santa Monica, California.
Works
- Junior High School Plays: Ten Short Plays on the American Epic (1938)
- The Secret of the Old House (1941)
- Twelve Bright Trumpets (1942, published in England as The Conqueror, and Other Tales from the Middle Ages )
- The Secret of the Closed Gate (1944)
- The Singing Cave (1945)
- Judith of France (1948)
- The Sword and the Compass: The Far-Flung Adventures of Captain John Smith (1951)
- The Secret of Bucky Moran (1952)
- The Story of Florence Nightingale (1952)
- The Story of General Custer (1954)
- Who Rides By? (1955)
- Comanche of the Seventh (1957)
- The Secret of Smuggler's Cove (1959)
- Journey for a Princess (1960)
- Bride of Glory: The Story of Elizabeth Bacon Custer (1962)
- Voyage to Coromandel (1965)
- The Canyon Castaways (1966)
- A Hole in the Hedge (1968)
- Cleopatra, Sister of the Moon (1969)
- The Other Island (1971)
- Shelley's Mary: A Life of Mary Godwin Shelley (1973)
References
- ↑ "Margaret Carver Leighton Papers". Kerlan Collection. University of Minnesota Libraries.
- ↑ Guide to the Margaret Carver Leighton Papers. Washington State University. Retrieved November 21, 2007. Archived February 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Margaret (Carver) Leighton". Contemporary Authors. Gale Literary Databases. August 22, 2003. June 22, 2005.
External links
- Margaret Leighton papers at the University of Oregon, with historical note
- Margaret Leighton papers at the University of Minnesota, with biographical sketch
- Margaret Carver Leighton at Library of Congress Authorities, with 22 catalog records