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Katherine M. Yates

Katherine Merritte Snyder Yates (November 12, 1865 – October 25, 1951) was a Canadian-American writer, mainly of children's books. She lived in Honolulu from 1910 to 1942.

Biography

Yates was born in Drumbo, Ontario, the daughter of Peter M. Snyder and Julia P. Turner Snyder. Katherine Snyder married American writer Ralph T. Yates in 1889. They divorced in 1910, and she lived in Honolulu from 1910 to 1942, and wrote about travel in Hawaii for National Geographic and Sunset Magazine. She died in 1951, at the age of 85, in Laguna Beach, California.

Publications

Yates wrote allegorical stories explaining Christian Science principles to young readers, though Yates also emphasized these stories "are not written primarily for children in years; but are for the little girl or boy within, who never has grown up, and never will grow up." Mary Baker Eddy recommended Yates's book On the Way There to her readers in 1904. She was a member of the National League of American Pen Women and the Authors League of America.

Books

  • ' (1903)
  • ' (1904)—part of the series
  • ' (1904)
  • ' (1906)—part of the series
  • ' (1906)—part of the series
  • ' (1908, also known as By the Roadside)—part of the series
  • ' (1908, illustrated by Clara Powers Wilson)
  • ' (1910)
  • ' (1912)—part of the series
  • ' (1912)
  • Any Time (1913)
  • ' (1914)
  • The Questions of my Friend (1915)
  • ' (1916)—part of the series
  • ' (1919)—part of the series
  • ' (1922)—part of the series
  • ' (1929, as E. E. Steven)
  • The Feather Cloak (1936)

Short stories and essays

  • "Sweet Pea Blossoms" (1902)
  • "Sallie's Red Cheek" (1902)
  • "What About the Water?" and "Old Waikiki" (1913)
  • "The Lily-Bud Clubs' Glorious Fourth" (1915)
  • "In Aloha Land: Intimate Notes on Hawaii" (1916, as Katherine P. Mayhew)
  • "From Cell to Sunlight" (1921)
  • "Under the Hau Tree" (1925, Weird Tales, reprinted in 1965 in Magazine of Horror)

References

External links

  • Terence E. Hanley, "Katherine Yates (1865-1951), Tellers of Weird Tales (December 17, 2013); a blog post about Yates, with links and images.