Robin McKown | |
---|---|
Born | Louise Clason January 27, 1907 |
Died | August 1975 | (aged 68)
Occupation | Author |
Parent | George Samuel Clason |
Robin McKown (January 27, 1907 — August 1975) was an American writer of young adult literature, chiefly biography and fiction. During and after World War II, she was chair of an organization that helped the widows and orphans of men who had died fighting for the French Resistance. She received the Josette Frank Award for Janine in 1960.[1] The following year she received the Child Study Association Award for the same book.[2]
Robin McKown was born in Denver[2][3] or Boulder, Colorado.[4] During her childhood in Denver, she was known as Louise and Louisa Clason.[5][6] Her parents were Anna and George Samuel Clason,[2][5][6] author and cofounder of the Clason Map Company, who settled in Denver in 1900.[7] Her brother Clyde B. Clason was also an author.[7]
McKown earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Colorado[3] before furthering her studies at Northwestern University and the University of Illinois.[8]
She married Dallas McKown, becoming Robin McKown.[2] She died in August 1975 in Beaver Dams, New York.[4]
She worked in both sales promotion and radio scriptwriting and was the author of a column for the Book-of-the-Month Club.[8] She was also a literary agent.[2]
McKown wrote books for young adults, traveling throughout the United States and to the Congo, South Africa, Peru, Ireland, Italy, Madagasgar, and North Africa for research.[2]
During World War II, McKown volunteered with an organization that helped the widows and orphans of men who had died fighting for the French Resistance, spending six weeks in France following the Allied victory in 1945.[8] She was the chairman of the organization known at the Friends of Widows and Orphans of the French Resistance following the war.[8][9] Formally named The National Association of Families of the Shot and Massacred (Association Nationale des Familles de Fusillés et Massacrés), it was allied with the American Aid to France. The organization was headquartered in New York City, where McKown lived at the time.[10] Packages of food, clothing, toys and medicine were sent to more than 1,000 survivors.[9] Later, she returned to northeastern France and lived there for three years, an experience that inspired the settings for two of her novels, Janine and Patriot of the Underground.[8] After France, she returned to New York City.[11]