Maurine Whipple

Maurine Whipple (20 January 1903 12 April 1992) was a twentieth-century American novelist and short story writer best known for her novel The Giant Joshua (1941)[1] about southern Utah and polygamy. The novel sold well but caused controversy among the Mormon community.[2] She won the 1938 Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship for The Giant Joshua, which was intended to be part of a trilogy.[3][4]

Whipple spent most of her life, including her early and later years, in Southern Utah. Her papers are in the special collections at Brigham Young University library.[5]


Publications

See also

References

  1. Maureen Whipple, Mormon Literature Database (accessed March 17, 2012)
  2. "Too sacred for public consumption -or- Disgusting the prophet’s wife" by Theric Jepson, A Motley Vision, July 9, 2009 (accessed March 17, 2011)
  3. bhodges. "I'm pitching the Whipple biography with all my might". Patheos. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  4. Bracy, Marybeth; Lambert, Linda. "Maurine Whipple's Story of The Giant Joshua" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Studies. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  5. BYU, Special Collections. https://search.lib.byu.edu/byu/search?collection=lee+--+special_collections&q=maurine+whipple. Retrieved 17 November 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)


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