Madeleine L’Engle
About Madeleine L’Engle (1918-2007)
Madeleine was born on November 29th, 1918, and spent her
formative years in New York City. Instead of her school work, she found that
she would much rather be writing stories, poems and journals for herself, which
was reflected in her grades (not the best). However, she was not discouraged.
At age 12, she moved to the French Alps with her parents and
went to an English boarding school where, thankfully, her passion for writing
continued to grow. She flourished during her high school years back in the
United States at Ashley Hall in Charleston, South Carolina, vacationing with
her mother in a rambling old beach cottage on a beautiful stretch of Florida
Beach.
She went to Smith College and studied English with some
wonderful teachers as she read the classics and continued her own creative
writing. She graduated with honors and moved into a Greenwich Village apartment
in New York. She worked in the theater, where Equity union pay and a flexible
schedule afforded her the time to write! She published her first two novels
during these years—A Small Rain and Ilsa—before meeting Hugh Franklin, her
future husband, when she was an understudy in Anton Chekov’s The Cherry Orchard.
They married during The Joyous Season.
She had a baby girl and kept on writing, eventually moving
to Connecticut to raise the family away from the city in a small dairy farm
village with more cows than people. They bought a dead general store, and
brought it to life for 9 years. They moved back to the city with three
children, and Hugh revitalized his professional acting career.
As the years passed and the children grew, Madeleine
continued to write and Hugh to act, and they to enjoy each other and life.
Madeleine began her association with the Cathedral Church of St. John the
Divine, where she was the librarian and maintained an office for more
than thirty years. After Hugh’s death in 1986, it was her writing and lecturing
that kept her going. She lived through the 20th century and into the 21st and
wrote over 60 books. She enjoyed being with her friends, her children, her
grandchildren, and her great grandchildren.
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