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Sarah P. McLean Greene (1856–1935)

Author of Cape Cod Folks

9+ Works 33 Members 2 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Sarah P. McLean Greene

Associated Works

Best Loved Short Stories of Nineteenth Century America (2003) — Contributor — 39 copies

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Common Knowledge

Other names
McLean, Sally Pratt
Greene. Sarah P. McLean
Birthdate
1856-07-03
Date of death
1935-12-28
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Simsbury, Connecticut, USA
Place of death
Lexington, Massachusetts, USA
Places of residence
Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA
Education
Mount Holyoke College
Occupations
teacher
short story writer
novelist
magazine writer
poet
Short biography
Sarah "Sally" McLean, later Greene, was born in in Simsbury, Connecticut, one of five children of Dudley Bestor McLean and his wife Mary Payne. Her brother George Payne McLean became a governor of Connecticut and U.S. Senator. Sally was educated at private schools and then attended Mount Holyoke Seminary (precursor to Mount Holyoke College). In 1874, after two years at Holyoke, she went to teach in the Cedarville, Massachusetts, school system for a year. On returning home, she turned her experiences as a teacher into a semi-autobiographical novel published in 1881 as Cape Cod Folks. It received good reviews, although some of the people whose names she had used for her characters sued her for libel and won a settlement.

The novel was adapted into a 1924 silent film under the title Her Man. Sally followed up with another novel with a New England locale, Towhead: The Story of a Girl (1883). The following year, she published a collection of her magazine stories as Some Other Folks. These and other writings about New England remain her best-known work. In 1887 she married Franklin Lynde Greene, with whom she would have two children who died in infancy, and moved with him to the western United States. This was the setting for her next pair of books: Lastchance Junction (1889) and Leon Pontifex (1890). After her husband died in 1890, Sally returned to New England. She retired from writing in 1913, having published 14 books during her career.

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Reviews

A tale of romance, tragedy and The Way of life on Cape Cod in days of yore.
½
 
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rayub | 1 other review | Oct 20, 2019 |
This book is a fictionalized account of a teacher who came to my great-grandparents' home town to teach at the local school. In the late 19th century, the work resulted in a lawsuit which was published in the New York Times (the book was also turned into a Broadway musical which ran for 24 performances from October 1906-November 1906). The lawsuit, filed by my great grandfather Lorenzo Nightingale, alleges that the author, Ms. McLean, committed libel and slander against him. Grandpa Nightingale won his lawsuit. The suit required that the book be republished, with names changed and the described events were further fictionalized to protect the innocent.… (more)
 
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MarmotandWombat | 1 other review | Mar 5, 2007 |

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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
1
Members
33
Popularity
#421,955
Rating
3.0
Reviews
2
ISBNs
7
Favorited
1