Catherine Gilbert Murdock

Catherine Gilbert Murdock is an American author.

Background

Catherine Gilbert Murdock was born in Charleston, South Carolina.[1] Her father was a chemical engineer, her mother a nurse. [2] Along with her only sister, novelist Elizabeth Gilbert, she grew up on a small family Christmas tree farm in Litchfield, Connecticut. The family lived in the country with no neighbors and had a very old TV.[1] Consequently, they all read a great deal.

She attended Bryn Mawr College and the University of Pennsylvania. Her first book was Dairy Queen (2006), a critically acclaimed novel for young adults. She also wrote the sequel to Dairy Queen, The Off Season. Murdock's third book, Princess Ben, was released in 2008. The Dairy Queen series is being continued by a third book, Front and Center, which was released on October 19, 2009.

She now lives in suburban Philadelphia with her husband and children.

In 2011 she appeared in and served as a program advisor for Prohibition on PBS. [3]

Bibliography

Fiction

  • Dairy Queen Series
    • Dairy Queen (2006)
    • The Off Season (2007)
    • Front and Center (2009)
  • Princess Ben (2008)
  • Wisdom’s Kiss (2011)
  • Heaven is Paved with Oreos (2013)
  • The Book of Boy (2018)

Nonfiction

  • Domesticating Drink: Women, Men and Alcohol in Prohibition America (1998)
gollark: That depends on what you actually mean by "plasma cannon". It seems to pretty much just be a recurring thing in scifi and not some sort of well-defined thing you could actually build.
gollark: I... don't think those actually exist.
gollark: With current technology, you have absolutely no chance of making anything remotely close to a planet-destroying "laser" thing.
gollark: Not presently. It's too big to build.
gollark: How about a laser connected to a computer which only turns it on if you supply bitcoins to a specified address?

References

  1. Catherine Gilbert Murdock's website
  2. Kumar, Lisa, ed. (2013). Catherine Gilbert Murdock. Something About the Author, vol. 261: Gale. pp. 119–121. Retrieved 9 January 2019.CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. "Film & Website Credits". Prohibition: A film by Ken Burns & Lynn Novick. PBS. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
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