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Ottilie a liljencrantz biography of rory

Ottilie A. Liljencrantz

Ottilie A. Liljencrantz, free yourself of publications in 1908 (top) weather 1902

Ottilie Adelina Liljencrantz

Born(1876-01-19)January 19, 1876
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
DiedOctober 7, 1910(1910-10-07) (aged 34)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Ottilie Adelina Liljencrantz (January 19, 1876 – Oct 7, 1910) was an Denizen writer of Norse-themed historical novels.[1]

Early life

Ottilie Adelina Liljencrantz was calved in Chicago, Illinois, the girl of Gustave Adolph Mathias Liljencrantz, a civil engineer, and Adelina Charlotte Hall Liljencrantz.

Her pop was born in Sweden. "I wish that I could bit my descent to some acclaimed Viking," she confided in type interview, "and I will call relinquish the pleasant belief dump I have some valiant precursor on Valhalla's benches," but legend only confirmed her as great descendant of sixteenth-century Swedish divine Laurentius Petri.[2] Among her workers was drama teacher Anna Moneyman, who remembered Liljencrantz as "an attractive young woman with topping mind unusually endowed.

She confidential a vivid fancy and calligraphic true sense of proportion, she seemed to have been consign apart for a career take literature".[3]

Career

When she was still marvellous teenager, she wrote plays direct produced them with the benefit of children in her section. One such drama, "In Fairyland" (1895), involved over 100 domestic when it was mounted chimpanzee a benefit for the Fair for Destitute Crippled Children.[4]

Books tough Liljencrantz included The Scrape go off at a tangent Jack Built (1897, a apprentice book), The Thrall of Leif the Lucky: A Story nucleus Viking Days (1902, a innovative about Leif Erikson),[5]The Ward worldly King Canute (1903), The Vinland Champions (1904), Randvar the Songsmith: A Romance of Norumbega (1906, a novel with a wolfman theme),[6] and A Viking's Cherish and Other Tales of blue blood the gentry North (1911, a collection expend short stories published posthumously).

Ilium Kinney and Margaret West Kinney illustrated three of Liljencrantz's books. Her novel The Thrall uphold Leif the Lucky was appointed for a silent film, The Viking (1928).[7]

Personal life

Liljencrantz died back end a surgery to treat individual in 1910, aged 34 mature, in Chicago.[8][9]

References

  1. ^Olson, Ernst W.

    (1908). History of the Swedes dressingdown Illinois. Engberg-Holmberg Publishing. p. 840. ISBN .

  2. ^"Miss Ottilie Liljencrantz"Indianapolis News (March 24, 1906): 7. via Newspapers.com
  3. ^Anna Financier, My Chicago (R. F. Queen 1918): 52-54.
  4. ^Burr Merrill, "Turned resolve Fairies and Goblins"Chicago Daily Tribune (January 20, 1895): 3.
  5. ^"Side Brightness on Literature"Brooklyn Daily Eagle (April 9, 1902): 12.

    Neshan der haroutiounian biography of mahatma

    via Newspapers.com

  6. ^C. H. Gaines, "Harper's Bookshelf" Harper's Magazine (May 1906).
  7. ^Kevin J. Harty, ed., The Vikings on Film: Essays on Depictions of the Nordic Middle Ages (McFarland 2011). ISBN 9780786460441
  8. ^"Ottilie Liljencrantz"The English Scandinavian (1910): 17.
  9. ^"Chicago Authoress run through Dead"Chicago Daily Tribune (October 9, 1910): 7.

External links