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Gene Stratton-Porter

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Gene Stratton-Porter Summary

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Gene Stratton-Porter (August 17, 1863 - December 6, 1924) was an American author, amateur naturalist, wildlife photographer, and one of the earliest women to form a movie studio and production company. She wrote some of the best selling novels and well-received columns in magazines of the day. Born Geneva Grace Stratton in Wabash County, Indiana, she married Charles D. Porter in 1886, and they had one daughter, Jeannette. She became a wildlife photographer, specializing in the birds and moths in one of the last of the vanishing wetlands of the lower Great Lakes Basin. The Limberlost and Wildflower Woods of northeastern Indiana were the laboratory and inspiration for her stories, novels, essays, photography, and movies. Although there is evidence that her first book was "Strike at Shanes", which was published anonymously, her first attributed novel, The Song of the Cardinal met with great commercial success. Her novels Freckles and A Girl of the Limberlost are set in the wooded wetlands and swamps of the disappearing central Indiana ecosystems she loved and documented. She eventually wrote over 20 books. Although Stratton-Porter wanted to focus on nature books, it was her romantic novels that made her famous and generated the finances that allowed her to pursue her nature studies. She was an accomplished author, artist and photographer and is generally considered to be one of the first female authors to promulgate public positions; conserving the Limberlost Swamp in her case.

Catherine Woolley, author of the "Ginnie and Geneva" series of children's books, may have named her character of Geneva Porter after Geneva Stratton-Porter. One of her last novels, Her Father's Daughter, was set outside of Los Angeles, California where she had moved in the 1920s for health reasons and to expand her business ventures into the movie industry. This novel presented a unique window into Stratton-Porter's personal feelings on WWI-era racism, especially relating to orientals. She and her driver, died in Los Angeles in 1924 when her limosine was struck by a streetcar. A building at Purdue University Calumet in Hammond, IN is named in her honor. A rest stop along U.S. Interstate 90 also shares her name. Her Wildflower Woods home on Lake Sylvan, Rome City, IN and her Limberlost home in Geneva, IN are now museums operated by the Indiana State Museum.

Contents

Novels

  • The Song of the Cardinal, 1903
  • Freckles, 1904
  • At the Foot of the Rainbow, 1907
  • A Girl of the Limberlost, 1909
  • The Harvester, 1911
  • Laddie, 1913
  • Michael O'Halloran, 1915
  • A Daughter of the Land, 1918
  • Her Father's Daughter, 1921
  • The White Flag, 1923
  • The Keeper of the Bees, 1925
  • The Magic Garden, 1927

Nature Books

  • What I Have Done with Birds, 1907
  • Birds of the Bible, 1909
  • Music of the Wild, 1910
  • Moths of the Limberlost, 1912
  • After the Flood, 1912
  • Birds of the Limberlost, 1914
  • Homing with the Birds, 1919
  • Wings, 1923
  • Tales You Won't Believe, 1925

Poetry and Essays

  • Morning Face, 1916
  • The Fire Bird, 1922
  • Jesus of the Emerald, 1923
  • Let Us Highly Resolve, 1927
  • Field o’ My Dreams: The Poetry of Gene-Stratton Porter, 2007

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    Gene(va) (Grace) Stratton-Porter
    As William Lyon Phelps wrote in the Bookman (December 1921), during her lifetime Gene Stratton-Porter was "a public institution, like Yellowstone Park." By 1915 Americans had purchased more than eight million copies of her books, establishing her as one... more

    Stratton-Porter, Gene (1863-1924)
    Gene Stratton-Porter was a popular author, photographer, and illustrator whose prolific output of romance-spiced nature writings found an enthusiastic audience with middle-class Americans in the early 1900s. Her 26 books have been through multiple editio... more


     
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    Gene Stratton-Porter from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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