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For a distinguished biography or autobiography by an American author, three thousand dollars ($3,000).

Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life, by Joan D. Hedrick (Oxford University Press)

Joan Hedrick receiving the Pulitzer Prize from Columbia President George Rupp.

Winning Work

Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life

In this landmark book, the first full-scale biography of Harriet Beecher Stowe in over fifty years, Joan D. Hedrick tells the absorbing story of this gifted, complex, and contradictory woman.

Hedrick takes readers into the multi-layered world of nineteenth-century morals and mores, exploring the influence of then-popular ideas of "true womanhood" on Stowe's upbringing as a member of the outspoken Beecher clan, and her eventful life as a writer and shaper of public opinion who was also a mother of seven. It offers a lively record of the flourishing parlor societies that launched and sustained Stowe throughout the 44 years of her career, and the harsh physical realities that governed so many women's lives. The epidemics, high infant mortality, and often disastrous medical practices of the day are portrayed in moving detail, against the backdrop of western expansion, the great social upheaval accompanying the abolotionist movement, and the entry of women into public life.

(From the jacket)

Copyright: 1994, Oxford University Press

Biography


Joan D. Hedrick is the author of Solitary Comrade: Jack London and His Work, and the Director of Women's Studies and Associate Professor of History at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut.

She holds degrees from Brown University (Ph.D. 1974) and Vassar College (A.B. 1966).

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Biography in 1995:

The Jury

Richard Lingeman(chair )

author, executive editor

Justin Kaplan

author-biographer

Kay Mills

author

Winners in Biography

1995 Prize Winners