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Olivia Coolidge

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Name
  
Olivia Coolidge

Role
  
Writer

Awards
  
John Newbery Medal


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Died
  
December 10, 2006, Essex, United Kingdom

Education
  
Somerville College, Oxford

Books
  
Greek Myths, Colonial Entrepreneur: Dr Silves, Hercules and Other Tales fro, The Trojan War, Lives of Famous Romans

Margaret Olivia Ensor Coolidge (October 16, 1908 − December 10, 2006) was a British-born American writer and educator. She published 27 books, many for young adults, including The Greek Myths (1949), her debut; The Trojan War (1952); Legends of the North (1951); Makers of the Red Revolution (1963); Men of Athens, one runner-up for the 1963 Newbery Medal; Lives of Famous Romans (1965); and biographies of Eugene O'Neill, Winston Churchill, Edith Wharton, Gandhi, and Tom Paine. Olivia Coolidge was born in London to Sir Robert Ensor, a journalist and historian. She earned a degree in Classics and Philosophy at Somerville College, Oxford, in 1931 and a Master's degree in 1940. In Germany, England and the U.S. she taught Greek, Latin, and English. In 1946 she married Archibald C. Coolidge of Connecticut, who had four children.

References

Olivia Coolidge Wikipedia