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Virginia Sorensen

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Name
  
Virginia Sorensen

Role
  
Author

Spouse
  
Alec Waugh (m. 1969)


Virginia Sorensen wwwldsfilmcompauVirginiaSorensenjpg

Died
  
December 24, 1991, Hendersonville, North Carolina, United States

Education
  
Brigham Young University (1934), Missouri School of Journalism, Stanford University

Awards
  
John Newbery Medal, Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Books
  
Miracles on Maple Hill, Plain Girl, A little lower than the angels, The evening and the m, Where Nothing is Long Ago

Similar People
  
Alec Waugh, Evelyn Waugh, John Newbery

Virginia Sorensen, 1912-1991


Virginia Sorensen, née Eggertsen, also credited as Virginia Sorenson (February 17, 1912, in Provo, Utah – December 24, 1991), was the author of the 1957 John Newbery Medal winning Miracles on Maple Hill, based in the Erie, Pennsylvania region where she lived at the time. She grew up in Manti and American Fork, Utah. Her first novel, A Little Lower Than the Angels, was written and published in 1942 while she resided in Terre Haute, Indiana, with her first husband Frederick C. Sorensen, a professor at Indiana State Teachers College, now Indiana State University. With its publication, Alfred Knopf declared, "I have seldom introduced a new novelist with the confidence I feel in the author of this remarkable book. It marks the debut, I believe, of a major American writer." She is considered "one of Utah's premiere gifts to literary America." Her first book for children, Curious Missy, grew out of her efforts with a bookmobile in Alabama. She later divorced Sorensen and married Alec Waugh, son of Arthur Waugh and brother of Evelyn Waugh, in 1969. Her books are usually Mormon-themed. She received two Guggenheim fellowships, one in 1946 to study tribe of Mexican Indians, and one in 1954 to study in Denmark as regards the history of Sanpete Valley's settlers.

Virginia Sorensen Virginia Sorensen Edinboros AwardWinning Author Erie Yesterday

References

Virginia Sorensen Wikipedia