Occupation Novelist Movies The Best of Everything | Role Novelist Name Rona Jaffe | |
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Died December 30, 2005, London, United Kingdom People also search for Jean Negulesco, Mann Rubin, Edith R. Sommer, Adele Palmer Books The Best of Everything, Mazes and Monsters, The road taken, Class Reunion, After the Reunion: A Novel |
2015 rona jaffe foundation writers awards winners
Rona Jaffe (June 12, 1931 – December 30, 2005) was an American novelist who published numerous works from 1958 to 2003. She may have been best known for her controversial novel Mazes and Monsters (1981). During the 1960s, she also wrote cultural pieces for Cosmopolitan as the new editor, Helen Gurley Brown, markedly changed its character.
Contents
- 2015 rona jaffe foundation writers awards winners
- Those crazy games book club mazes and monsters by rona jaffe
- Biography
- Death
- References

Those crazy games book club mazes and monsters by rona jaffe
Biography
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Jaffe grew up in affluent circumstances on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, the only child of Samuel Jaffe, an elementary-school principal, and his first wife, Diana (née Ginsberg). Her grandfather was a construction magnate who built the Carlyle Hotel. She graduated from Radcliffe College in 1953.
Jaffe wrote her first book, The Best of Everything (1958), while working as an associate editor at Fawcett Publications in the 1950s. It was later adapted as a movie by the same title, starring Joan Crawford, released in 1959. The book has been described as distinctly "pre-women's liberation" in the way it depicts women in the working world.
Camille Paglia noted in 2004 that the book and popular HBO series Sex and the City had much in common in that the characters in both (who have similar lives) are "very much at the mercy of cads."
During the late 1960s, Helen Gurley Brown hired Jaffe to write cultural pieces for Cosmopolitan, with a "Sex and the Single Girl" slant. In 1981, she published Mazes and Monsters, which depicted a Dungeons & Dragons-like game that caused disorientation and hallucinations among its players and incited them to violence and attempted suicide. The book was controversial as it appeared to be based in part on the apocryphal 1979 steam tunnel incident. Soon it seemed related to Patricia Pulling's accusations in the 1980s that D&D and other role-playing games encouraged devil worship and other "evils". The book was adapted as a 1982 made-for-TV movie, featuring one of the earliest appearances of Tom Hanks.
Death
Jaffe published seventeen novels during her career. She died in 2005 in London from cancer, aged 74.