Linnie Marsh Wolfe

Linnie Marsh Wolfe (January 8, 1881 – September 15, 1945)[1] was an American librarian. She won the 1946 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for her 1945 biography of John Muir titled Son of the Wilderness: The Life of John Muir (New York: A. A. Knopf, 1945).[2]

Linnie Marsh Wolfe
Born8 January 1881 
Died15 September 1945  (aged 64)

Biography

Linnie Marsh was born in Big Rapids, Michigan.[1][3] She graduated from Whitman College with an A.B. and Radcliffe College with an A.M. in 1907.[1] She also graduated from the University of Southern California library school and was a student at the University of Washington and the University of California.[3] She worked as a teacher in Washington and a librarian in public libraries and high schools in Los Angeles, California.[3] In 1924, she married Roy Wolfe. They had no children.[3]

While working as a librarian, Wolfe gained an interest in the work of naturalist author John Muir. She organized trips for schoolchildren to Muir's home, spoke about him on the radio, and became secretary of the John Muir Association.[1] Some of Muir's journals had been previously published by William Frederic Bade and Wolfe was asked to edit Muir's unpublished journals and notes. She completed the work, John of the Mountains: The Unpublished Journals of John Muir, published by A. A. Knopf in 1938, after which Alfred A. Knopf, Sr. asked her to write a biography of Muir. Wolfe interviewed Muir's daughters and other family members and associates Son of the Wilderness: The Life of John Muir was published by Knopf in May 1945. Reviews were mixed, and Wolfe was criticized for "haphazard" documentation and a lack of critical judgement.[1] The Muir biographer and environmental historian Donald Worster notes that Wolfe's biography is largely based on her interviews, which were unrecorded and seem "embellished for dramatic effect".[4] Char Miller criticized Wolfe for including a conversation between Muir and Gifford Pinchot for which no documentary evidence appears to exist.[5] The book is required reading for rangers and volunteers at the John Muir National Historic Site.[6]

Wolfe died in a Berkeley, California nursing home.[1] She did not live to receive her Pulitzer Prize in May 1946.[3]

gollark: Obviously.
gollark: Unfortunately, it's literally impossible to explain to you now.
gollark: Well, you haven't, due to the cognitohazards deployed against LyricTech™, but I mean other people.
gollark: This also implies that the perfect programming language does, in fact, exist. I wonder if anyone worked out which one it is.
gollark: Consider: it is better for a programming language to exist than to not exist. Therefore, the maximally great programming language exists. Macron does not exist. So it is not the maximally great programming language.

References

  1. "Linnie Marsh Wolfe." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2001. Gale Biography In Context. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  2. books.google.com
  3. "Sketches of Those Just Added by Columbia's Trustees to Roll of Pulitzer Prize Winners". The New York Times. May 7, 1946. p. 14.
  4. Worster, Donald (October 21, 2008). A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir. Oxford University Press. p. 469. ISBN 978-0-19-516682-8. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  5. Miller, Char (Summer 1993). "Linnie Marsh Wolfe: Son of the Wilderness: The Life of John Muir". John Muir Newsletter. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  6. "Suggested Reading". United States National Park Service. May 6, 2012. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
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