Dorothy Canfield Fisher (1879–1958)
Author of Understood Betsy
About the Author
Author Dorothy Canfield Fisher was born in Lawrence, Kansas on February 17, 1879. She received a Ph.D. in romance languages from Columbia University in 1904. She wrote novels, short stories, children's books, educational works, and memoirs. In 1912, she met Maria Montessori in Italy and was so show more impressed by the educator's theories that she wrote A Montessori Mother, The Montessori Manual, and Mothers and Children. She worked for many environmental, children's and education causes in the 1940s and 1950s. She died in Arlington, Vermont on November 9, 1958. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
This author's works of fiction were under her birth name, Dorothy Canfield; works of non-fiction were published under her married name, Dorothy Canfield Fisher.
Image credit: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)
Works by Dorothy Canfield Fisher
Landmarks of American History, 10 Vol. Set (Voyages of Christopher Columbus, Landing of the Pilgrims, Paul Revere & (1950) 5 copies, 1 review
Vermont summer homes 2 copies
Memories of my home town, 2 copies
Corneille and Racine in England 2 copies
As ye sow 1 copy
Sex Education [short story] 1 copy
Seasoned timber 1 copy
Associated Works
World War I and America: Told by the Americans Who Lived It (1918) — Contributor — 226 copies, 1 review
Women's Magazines, 1940-1960: Gender Roles and the Popular Press (1998) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Women in the Trees: U.S. Women's Short Stories About Battering and Resistance, 1839-1994 (1996) — Contributor — 45 copies
Homo Faber: Work Through the Ages (1929) — Introduction, some editions; Translator, some editions — 7 copies
The Best Short Stories of 1936 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story (1936) — Contributor — 5 copies
The Best Short Stories of 1928 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story (1928) — Contributor — 3 copies
First Love: Stories by Sixteen of Today's Great Authors of Romantic Fiction (1948) — Contributor — 3 copies
Uncle Lisha's shop and A Danvis pioneer — Introduction — 2 copies
Stories for girls — Contributor — 1 copy
My Friend Flicka, The Apprentice, Old Ben — Contributor — 1 copy
Avon Modern Short Story Monthly No. 7 (14 Great stories by 14 Great Authors) (1943) — Contributor — 1 copy
Dynamo Farm: A 4-H Story — Foreword — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Canfield, Dorothea Frances
- Other names
- Canfield, Dorothy (pen name)
- Birthdate
- 1879-02-17
- Date of death
- 1958-11-09
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Ohio State University (BA ∙ 1899)
Sorbonne University
Columbia University (PhD ∙ 1904) - Occupations
- educational reformer
children's book author
social activist
writer
translator
memoirist - Organizations
- American Academy of Arts and Letters (Literature, 1931)
Book-of-the-Month Club - Awards and honors
- Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award
- Relationships
- Cather, Willa (friend)
- Short biography
- Dorothea Frances Canfield was born in Lawrence, Kansas, to James Hulme Canfield, an educator, and Flavia Camp, an artist and writer. Her father became a professor at the University of Kansas and later chancellor of the University of Nebraska and president of Ohio State University. As a child, she spent much time visiting her mother's family in Vermont, which served as the setting for many of her books. At age 10, she spent a year in Paris while her mother studied art, and became fluent in French. She graduated from Ohio State University and went on to study Romance languages at the Sorbonne in Paris and at Columbia University, where she earned a doctoral degree. She co-wrote the textbook English Rhetoric and Composition (1906). In 1907, she married John Redwood Fisher, with whom she had two children. In 1911, after visiting the "children's houses" in Rome established by Maria Montessori, she endeavored to introduce the Montessori method in the USA. She translated Montessori's books into English. She and their children accompanied her husband to France when he volunteered to work with the U.S. Army ambulance service and as an officer with the Medical Corps during World War I. She worked to establish a Braille press for blinded war veterans and the Bidart home for refugee children. In 1918, she published a memoir, Home Fires in France. She also wrote 22 novels, plus short stories, educational works, and literary criticism. She was renowned for her support of women's rights and racial equality. See also The Lady from Vermont: Dorothy Canfield Fisher's Life and World by Elizabeth Yates (1971) and Dorothy Canfield Fisher – A Biography by Ida H. Washington (1982).
- Nationality
- USA (birth)
- Birthplace
- Lawrence, Kansas, USA
- Places of residence
- Lawrence, Kansas, USA
Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
Columbus, Ohio, USA
Paris, France
Arlington, Vermont, USA - Place of death
- Arlington, Vermont, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- This author's works of fiction were under her birth name, Dorothy Canfield; works of non-fiction were published under her married name, Dorothy Canfield Fisher.
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
AMERICAN AUTHORS CHALLENGE--OCTOBER 2023--DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER in 75 Books Challenge for 2023 (October 2023)
Virago Monthly Reads: Feb 2018: Dorothy Canfield Fisher in Virago Modern Classics (March 2018)
old kids book, city girl on a farm in Name that Book (October 2012)
Reviews
This has been one of my favourite books since my mum gave it to me when I was a little girl. It belonged to her, and probably was passed along by someone even older—it is over a hundred years old! The edition I have is a battered hardcover with a torn binding and a big chunk of pages falling out, but I pick it up every few years and revisit it. It reads like historical fiction, though I believe it was contemporary when it was published. A little girl who was orphaned grows up with her show more fussy aunties in the big city, but when one of the aunties falls ill, she is shuffled off to live with some other relations in the country. On the Putney farm (and even on the journey there), she must exercise a dormant common sense and practicality, despite her abject terror. Her fussy aunties had never asked or expected her to do anything for herself, but despite that, she ends up finding an inner strength and independence that sees her through some adventures that may seem trivial, but represent tremendous leaps for a girl who had never had to use such traits. It is a charming story with a straightforward narrative voice that flows smoothly and simply. Although it was written in and for a very different time, the story and the lesson hold up very well. show less
I loved this 1920s book that flips the typical man/woman roles on its head. The Knapps are a family of five struggling to get by. Lester, the father, is hopeless at getting along at work, constantly making errors and not progressing at all. Eva, the mother, runs a beautifully functioning household on her husband's meager salary, but is constantly slaving away and feeling stifled by her housework and her needy children. Everyone in the family has healthy problems and their youngest child, show more Stephen, is acknowledged by all their acquaintances as a terror, despite Eva's excellent mothering.
Then all is flipped on its head when an accident leads to a role reversal, Eva going out to work and Lester staying home to mind the kids. Though all feel sorry for them, they end up flourishing in these circumstances. But what will happen if all goes back to "normal"?
This book powerfully examines society's expectations for men and women and what happens when those expectations just do not fit. I loved it. show less
Then all is flipped on its head when an accident leads to a role reversal, Eva going out to work and Lester staying home to mind the kids. Though all feel sorry for them, they end up flourishing in these circumstances. But what will happen if all goes back to "normal"?
This book powerfully examines society's expectations for men and women and what happens when those expectations just do not fit. I loved it. show less
Dorothy Canfield Fisher turned gender roles upside down in this novel about a dysfunctional family, set in small-town America in the 1920s. Eva Knapp is the epitome of the devoted housewife of the time. While she loves her husband and children, she is driven by a sense of duty to keep the household running like clockwork, and has little time for expressions of affection. She is plagued by eczema, and nothing the doctor prescribes seems to improve it. Her husband, Lester, is a forlorn show more bookkeeper with a going-nowhere job in the local department store. He's miserable with indigestion whenever he eats anything. Nothing the doctor prescribes seems to improve it. Their oldest child, Helen, is a mouse...always trying and failing to meet her mother's expectations, nervous and frail. Eleven-year-old Henry has inherited his father's weak stomach, and is often ill. All manner of special preparations and diets have been prescribed, but nothing seems to improve his condition either. And Stephen, the toddler...well, he's simply unmanageable. Prone to temper tantrums, to hiding under the stairs clutching his beloved Teddy Bear, and always, always tracking dirt into his mother's clean house. His mother faintly hopes he will one day grow out of it. When Lester fails to get a promotion, it appears that near-poverty is to be the family's permanent condition. But then a freak accident (or an opportunity seized to escape it all) lands Lester on his back...crippled and confined to a wheelchair. Out of necessity Eva seeks a job, and finds one in the ladies' wear department of the store where Lester had been employed. Lester and the children set about learning to keep house in her stead. Subtle changes begin to set in. Lester and Helen find they can quite well manage meals with the help of "cookery" books. Stephen has fewer tantrums, and is seen smiling at his father. Eva takes satisfaction in turning her organizational skills to tasks more suited to her nature. The family spends evenings together, sharing stories of their days, and playing whist. Some dust gathers in corners, but Eva's eczema disappears, and Henry becomes a boy who eats store-bought cookies without dire consequences. Everyone is obviously healthier and happier with the new arrangement. It's all cleverly laid out, from multiple perspectives, including the childrens', a nosy neighbor's, and the department store owner's. My only quibble is that there comes a day when it appears that Lester may "get well"...his spinal injury has healed to the point where he may actually walk again, and no one knows how to handle this. God forbid they carry on with what's working so well for them...what would people SAY? And not even the adults can discuss this honestly with one another. The ending felt a bit contrived, and at the same time underdone. Still well worth reading for an early take on role reversal, and understanding what it takes to make a happy life. show less
A fairly predictable children's tale about an orphan cared for by two very different sets of relatives, and the circumstances under which she thrives. It was clearly making a point about raising a child to think for herself, solve her own problems and value independence. Nothing to argue with there, but it's a bit heavy in its message at times. At other times, it's a delightful portrait of some excellent characters, and I enjoyed reading it. After reading this "novel for children", I show more discovered that the author was drawing on her exposure to Maria Montessori's educational principles in crafting the story, and that Dorothy Canfield Fisher was, in fact, instrumental in bringing the Montessori Method to the U. S., and was one of its earliest and strongest proponents. show less
Lists
Elevenses (1)
Out of Copyright (1)
Ambleside Books (1)
Female Author (1)
discontinued (1)
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 57
- Also by
- 48
- Members
- 6,130
- Popularity
- #4,015
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 89
- ISBNs
- 286
- Languages
- 4
- Favorited
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