![]() ![]() Stolz into the stable of children's book editor Ursula Nordstrom. Jaleski's care, her disabling symptoms resolved and in 1965, she married Dr. During this time she began writing to occupy her time and ultimately drafted her first novel, To Tell Your Love (1950), on yellow legal pads. Chronic pain from arthritis worsened and she was housebound by 1949. Marriage and children Īt age 18, she married and had one son, Bill. ![]() She attended Columbia University from 1936 to 1938 and the Katherine Gibbs School. Raised in Manhattan, she attended the Birch Wathen School and served as assistant editor of her school magazine, Birch Leaves. Mary Slattery was born on March 24, 1920, in Boston, Massachusetts. Although most of Stolz's works are fiction books, she made a few contributions to magazines such as Cosmopolitan, Ladies' Home Journal, and Seventeen. Her literary works range from picture books to young-adult novels. She received the 1953 Child Study Association of America's Children's Book Award for In a Mirror, Newbery Honors in 1962 for Belling the Tiger and 1966 for The Noonday Friends, and her entire body of work was awarded the George G. Mary Stolz (born Mary Slattery, Ma– December 15, 2006) was an American writer of fiction for children and young adults. Children's literature, young adult fiction ![]()
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