- Alice Tisdale Hobart
Alice Tisdale Hobart (1882-1967) born Alice Nourse in Lockport, New York, was an American novelist. Her most famous book, "Oil for the Lamps of China" [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1891936085/] , which was also made into a film, drew heavily on her experiences as the wife of an American oil executive in pre-communist China amid the turmoil of the overthrow of the Manchu Dynasty in 1912. Spinal meningitis in infancy and a fall when she was seventeen left Alice Nourse with frail health and back trouble which caused her to be semi-invalid at periods throughout her life. [ [http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv89611 Guide to the Alice Tisdale Hobart papers at the University of Oregon] ]
She attended the University of Chicago, but never graduated, opting instead to take a job. She first traveled to
China in 1908 to visit her sister Mary, who taught at a girl's school inHangchow , and returned two years later to take up a post at the same establishment. After marryingEarle Tisdale Hobart , aStandard Oil Company executive, inTientsin in 1914, she traveled toManchuria and in 1916 published an article on her experiences at the hands of Manchurian bandits in "The Atlantic Monthly ". It led to a series of pieces entitled "Leaves From a Manchurian Diary" and formed the basis for her first book, "Pioneering Where the World is Old" in 1917.Her life in
Changsha formed the backdrop for her second book, "By the City of the Long Sand" in 1926, while an assault onNanking by Nationalist soldiers and her escape over the city wall to the safety of the waiting American gunboats was recounted in "Within the Walls of Nanking" in 1928. This book started as a piece in "Harper's Magazine ". [ [http://www.harpers.org/archive/1927/07/0013407 What happened at Nanking: Letters of an eye-witness] ] Her fictional account of her experiences in China, not surprisingly, focused on the role played by Western businessmen, especially those engaged in importing and selling petroleum products. [ [http://www.ndu.edu/inss/mcnair/mcnair67/02_intro.htm McNair Paper 67 ] ]"Pidgin Cargo", set among traders on the
Yangtze River , appeared in 1929 andOil For the Lamps of China in 1933. After making her home inCalifornia in the 1940s, her subject matter expanded to encompass contemporaryMexico in "The Peacock Sheds His Tail" (1945) and Californian agrarian life in "The Cup and the Sword" (1942) and "The Cleft Rock" (1948). In 1959 she published her memoir, "Gusty's Child". [ Alice Tisdale Hobart, Gusty's Child (New York: Longmans Green, 1959)]She published more than a dozen novels in all by the time of her death in 1967, with almost four million copies in print.
Writings
*"Oil for the Lamps of China"
*"Leaves From a Manchurian Diary"
*"Pioneering Where the World is Old"
*"By the City of the Long Sand"
*"Within the Walls of Nanking"
*"Pidgin Cargo"
*"The Peacock Sheds His Tail"
*"The Cup and the Sword"
*"The Cleft Rock"
*"Gusty's Child"References
External links
*imdb name|0387547
* [http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?p_id=310443 "New York Times" reviews of two movies based on books by Hobart]
* [http://www.fandango.com/hobart,alicetisdale/filmography/p310443 Synopsis of the two films made from her books]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.