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Shelley Smith Mydans

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Full Name
  
Shelley Smith

Name
  
Shelley Mydans

Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Novelist


Occupation
  
Journalist

Spouse
  
Carl Mydans

Known for
  
novelist, war reporter

Employer
  
Life Magazine

Shelley Smith Mydans

Born
  
May 20, 1915
Palo Alto, California

Died
  
March 2002, Sacramento, California, United States

Shelley Smith Mydans (born Shelley Smith, May 20, 1915 – March 7, 2002) was an American novelist, journalist and prisoner of war.

Contents

Life

Mydans was born in California, where she grew up thinking of being a dancer, although her father was a university professor of journalism. She moved to New York to work for the Literary Digest, and became a journalist for Life magazine, where she met Carl Mydans in 1938. They married the following year and they were the first husband-and-wife team to be employed by the magazine.

World War II

They were sent initially to the United Kingdom to cover the war but they left for China when France was defeated. They eventually traveled over 45,000 miles visiting Scandinavia, Portugal, Italy, Chongqing in China and the British colony of Hong Kong. Mydans described her job as writer and researcher only occasionally getting attribution when a writer was not available. They were both caught by the Japanese in the Philippines and they were interred firstly in Manila and later in Shanghai. They were lucky to be exchanged in a prisoner swap in December 1943 and they both then returned to the war. Mydans was to write her first novel called "Open City" based on her time as a prisoner of the Japanese and this was published in 1945.

In 1945 her husband went to Manila where he was to record the iconic moment of MacArthurs return but this was denied to Mydans and she was sent to Guam to work on a restricted basis. "I was accredited to the navy, but I was not - because I was a woman - allowed to cover action on naval ships or planes and my articles had to be confined to such things as the navy flight nurses and marine base camps."

Post war

Mydans wrote for radio for the American ABC network after the war including for the news program The March of Time. She resigned when the first of her children were born. She wrote two more novels — the first was based around the life of Thomas a Becket and the other was based in 8th century Japan. She and her husband also wrote a non-fiction book about post war terrorism.

Mydans died in Sacramento, California in 2002.

References

Shelley Smith Mydans Wikipedia