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Janice Holt Giles : ウィキペディア英語版
Janice Holt Giles

Janice Holt Giles (March 28, 1905 – June 1, 1979) was a Kentucky author who lived near Knifley in Adair County, Kentucky.
She was born Janice Meredith Holt on March 28, 1905, in Altus, Arkansas; both her parents were teachers. Janice Holt worked for a number of years with a number of church-affiliated clerical jobs, first in Oklahoma and then in Kentucky, having moved to Frankfort in 1939 subsequent to her divorce that year from her first husband Otto Moore, whom she had wed in 1927. In 1941 Janice Holt obtained a position as secretary at the Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky).
In 1945 Janice Holt married Henry Giles, who was eleven years her junior. After first becoming acquainted on a 40-hour bus trip in 1943, the couple had subsequently courted via letters to and from Europe, where Henry Giles was serving in the military, and were married the same day Henry returned to the United States. The couple lived in Louisville until 1949, when they took up residence in Adair County within two miles of the area where Henry's ancestors had settled in 1803. They subsequently constructed a house, which took four years to complete, from the logs of four pioneer cabins. They lived there until Janice died of congestive heart failure in 1979. Henry Giles died in 1986 and was buried next to Janice in the Caldwell Chapel Separate Baptist Church cemetery in Knifley.
Janice Holt Giles began her writing career with an entry to a fiction contest in 1949 while still working at the Presbyterian Seminary in Louisville. Between 1950 and 1975 Giles wrote twenty-four books which were published. Noted primarily for her historical novels set in Kentucky - beginning with her debut novel ''The Enduring Hills'' - or on the Western frontier, she also wrote contemporary fiction set in the Kentucky hills, as well as autobiographical and nonfiction works, some of them co-authored with Henry. Her works include the Piney Woods trilogy, consisting of ''The Enduring Hills'' (1950), ''Miss Willie'' (1951), and ''Tara's Healing'' (1952), and the Kentucky trilogy, consisting of ''The Kentuckians'' (1953), ''Hannah Fowler'' (1956), and ''The Believers'' (1957). The Janice Holt Giles and Henry Giles Society was established in 1996 to preserve the literary legacy of Janice Holt Giles and Henry Giles and to restore their log home.
Giles's historical fiction works form a study of early American pioneer life in Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico among other states. Her accounts are accurate geographically and historically and are tied together by the fictitious Cooper, Fowler and Cartwright families. Real historical figures from Giles's novels include Ben Logan, Daniel Boone, James Harrod, William Whitley, James Wilkinson, Gen. Matthew Arbuckle, and Sam Houston. She also provides a realistic historical perspective of the relationships between Native Americans, White Settlers and African Americans. The interested reader can gain a solid understanding of the early process of national (USA) expansion by reading the listed volumes in the following order.
Book (approximate period covered; primary geographical settings): ''The Kentuckians'' (1775–1778; VA, KY, TN), ''Hannah Fowler'' (1778–1781; KY, TN, OH), ''The Land Beyond the Mountains'' (1781–1792; KY, PA, IN), ''The Believers'' (1795–1805; KY), ''Johnny Osage'' (1821; OK, AR), ''The Voyage to Santa Fe'' (1823; OK, TX, NM), ''Savanna'' (1829–1834; OK, AR), ''The Great Adventure'' (1834; CO, NM,), ''Run Me a River'' (September 1861; KY, IN), ''Six Horse Hitch'' (1859-1869; NE, CO).
==References==

*(Janice Holt Giles & Henry Giles Society )
*(Western Kentucky University Libraries manuscript collection )
*Dianne Watkins Stuart, ''Janice Holt Giles: A Writer's Life'' (1998), ISBN 978-0-8131-2095-9



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