Fanny Butcher

Fanny Butcher (September 13, 1888 – May 11, 1987)[1] was a long time writer and literary critic for the Chicago Tribune newspaper.

Personal life

Butcher was born on September 13, 1888 in Fredonia, Kansas. Her family moved to Chicago when she was 3-years-old[2] and she later attended Lewis Institute (now Illinois Institute of Technology) from 1906 to 1908. She graduated from the University of Chicago in 1910. In 1935 Butcher married Richard Bokum, an advertising executive, who died in 1963. They had no children[1]

Career

She began at the Tribune in 1913 and held various positions including society editor, club editor, crime reporter, fashion editor, assistant women's editor, special correspondent, assistant music critic. In 1923 she became the literary editor and held the position for 40 years until her retirement in 1963.

A cartoon by Helen E. Hokinson of The New Yorker on the back cover of Fanny Butcher's autobiography Many Lives, One Love shows a bookstore clerk showing a book to an elderly lady. The clerk is saying, "Hugh Walpole liked it, Fanny Butcher liked it, Wm. Rose Benet liked it, and Mrs. Roosevelt liked it, but it *isn't* very good." (drawing copyright 1940 and 1968 by The New Yorker Magazine). This shows that Fanny Butcher was a household name among bookish Americans in 1940.[3][1]

See also

Resources

  1. 1 2 3 "Fanny Butcher Dead; Literary Critic Was 99". The New York Times. 1987-05-17. Retrieved 2008-03-09.
  2. Heise, Kenan (1987-05-17). "Fanny Butcher Knew The Giants Of Literature". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2015-10-19.
  3. The Popular Educator Library, Volume two, National Educational Alliance, Inc, copyright 1938, 799.

Bibliography

External links

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