Mary Hastings Bradley (1882–1976)
Author of The Fortieth Door
About the Author
Works by Mary Hastings Bradley
Caravans and cannibals 2 copies
Pattern of three 2 copies
Nice people murder 2 copies
The wine of astonishment 2 copies
Murder in room 700 2 copies
Trailing the tiger 1 copy
Murder in the Family 1 copy
A hanging matter 1 copy
Unconfessed 1 copy
The splendid chance 1 copy
The road of desperation 1 copy
Nice people poison 1 copy
Associated Works
Great American Short Stories: O. Henry Memorial Prize Winning Stories, 1919-1934 (1935) — Contributor — 11 copies, 1 review
First Love: Stories by Sixteen of Today's Great Authors of Romantic Fiction (1948) — Contributor — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Bradley, Mary Hastings
- Birthdate
- 1882-04-19
- Date of death
- 1976-10-25
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Smith College
- Occupations
- war correspondent
travel writer
public speaker
novelist
mystery writer - Organizations
- Society of Women Geographers
- Relationships
- Tiptree, James, Jr. (daughter)
- Short biography
- Mary Hastings Bradley was born in Chicago, Illinois. In 1905, she graduated from Smith College. Afterwards, she traveled to Egypt with a cousin and was inspired to write The Palace of Darkened Windows and The Fortieth Door (1920). While doing research for her book The Favor of Kings, she met her husband Herbert Bradley, a lawyer, big game hunter, traveler and explorer. They married in 1910 and had a daughter, Alice, who became known as a science fiction writer under the pseudonym "James Tiptree, Jr."
As a war correspondent for Colliers magazine during World War II, Mary reported on women in the military in Italy, France and Germany. At the end of the war she described her tour of concentration camps in a magazine series on the Holocaust. She was a prolific writer of mysteries, travel books, novels, and short fiction. She was frequently asked to lecture on her travels and was inducted into the Society of Women Geographers, whose other members included Amelia Earhart, Margaret Mead and Eleanor Roosevelt. - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Places of residence
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
Members
Reviews
This was quite a find for me; at our biannual antiquarian book show this year, I stumbled upon a 4-volume set of historical fiction novels by Mary Hastings Bradley about the city of Chicago. Anyone who knows me well knows that I have a love affair with the city of Chicago. I'm usually down there about every other month or sooner, and can never get enough of it. I try to find what books I can about literary Chicago, too, so this was a real treat for me.
I haven't gotten around to reading the show more other 3 in the series yet so I don't know if they follow the same format, but I felt that we are more or less dropped into the middle of the story in The Fort, where we meet Barry John at Fort Dearborn, a mere few days before the Fort Dearborn Massacre of 1812. The evacuation has been announced and the soldiers and their families are getting ready to leave the Fort. Barry John is not an American soldier, but rather an English soldier who is helping the Americans. He is being courted by a squaw of one of the local Indian tribes, who is trying to get him to marry her and escape the battle. This is where, for one quick moment, I was afraid the story was roaming in romance territory. I was wrong. He decides to hold his ground with the Americans and evacuates with them, only to be ambushed with the others, just barely surviving the attack, when he is rescued by the squaw.
Mary Hastings Bradley actually does an admirable job of describing the ambush and subsequent massacre, not really holding back at all in the bloody descriptions of the battle and the treatment by the Indians of the survivors of the attack. I'm not entirely familiar with all of the historical facts surrounding the Fort Dearborn Massacre, but it would seem that Bradley did her research before writing this short novel, and I'm interested to see how well the other three volumes hold up.
Recommended if you're interested in the history of Chicago; otherwise, it may not hold much interest for you. show less
I haven't gotten around to reading the show more other 3 in the series yet so I don't know if they follow the same format, but I felt that we are more or less dropped into the middle of the story in The Fort, where we meet Barry John at Fort Dearborn, a mere few days before the Fort Dearborn Massacre of 1812. The evacuation has been announced and the soldiers and their families are getting ready to leave the Fort. Barry John is not an American soldier, but rather an English soldier who is helping the Americans. He is being courted by a squaw of one of the local Indian tribes, who is trying to get him to marry her and escape the battle. This is where, for one quick moment, I was afraid the story was roaming in romance territory. I was wrong. He decides to hold his ground with the Americans and evacuates with them, only to be ambushed with the others, just barely surviving the attack, when he is rescued by the squaw.
Mary Hastings Bradley actually does an admirable job of describing the ambush and subsequent massacre, not really holding back at all in the bloody descriptions of the battle and the treatment by the Indians of the survivors of the attack. I'm not entirely familiar with all of the historical facts surrounding the Fort Dearborn Massacre, but it would seem that Bradley did her research before writing this short novel, and I'm interested to see how well the other three volumes hold up.
Recommended if you're interested in the history of Chicago; otherwise, it may not hold much interest for you. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 25
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 71
- Popularity
- #245,551
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 47
- Languages
- 1


