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・ Ruth Patterson
・ Ruth Paul
・ Ruth Payne Burgess
・ Ruth Pearce
・ Ruth Peetoom
・ Ruth Perednik
・ Ruth Perry
・ Ruth Petroff
・ Ruth Pfau
・ Ruth Phillips
・ Ruth Picardie
・ Ruth Pickett Thompson
・ Ruth Pine Furniss
・ Ruth Pitter
・ Ruth Plato-Shinar
Ruth Plumly Thompson
・ Ruth Pointer
・ Ruth Polsky
・ Ruth Popkin
・ Ruth Porat
・ Ruth Posner
・ Ruth Posselt
・ Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
・ Ruth Price
・ Ruth Price with Shelly Manne & His Men at the Manne-Hole
・ Ruth Provost
・ Ruth Pryor
・ Ruth R. Benerito
・ Ruth Rabbah
・ Ruth Radelet


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Ruth Plumly Thompson : ウィキペディア英語版
Ruth Plumly Thompson

Ruth Plumly Thompson (27 July 1891 – 6 April 1976) was an American writer of children's stories, best known for writing many novels placed in Oz, the fictional land of L. Frank Baum's classic children's novel ''The Wonderful Wizard of Oz'' and its sequels.
==Life and work==

An avid reader of Baum's books and a lifelong children's writer, Thompson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and began her writing career in 1914 when she took a job with the Philadelphia ''Public Ledger''; she wrote a weekly children's column for the newspaper.〔Ruth Plumly Thompson, ''The Wizard of Way-Up and Other Wonders'', Introduction by Douglas G. Greene, Kinderhook, IL, International Wizard of Oz Club, 1985; Introduction, p. vii.〕 She had already published her first children's book, ''The Perhappsy Chaps'', and her second, ''The Princess of Cozytown'', was pending publication when William Lee, vice president of Baum's publisher Reilly & Lee, solicited Thompson to continue the Oz series. (Rumors among fans that Thompson was Baum's niece were untrue.)〔Ruth Plumly Thompson, "How I Came to Write Nineteen of the Oz Books," ''The Baum Bugle'', Vol. 1 No. 2 (October 1957).〕 Between 1921 and 1939, she wrote one Oz book a year.
(Thompson was the primary supporter of her widowed mother and invalid sister, so that the annual income from the Oz books was important for her financial circumstances.)〔David L. Greene and Dick Martin, ''The Oz Scrapbook'', New York, Random House, 1977; p. 58.〕
Thompson's contributions to the Oz series are lively and imaginative, featuring a wide range of colorful and unusual characters. However, one particular theme repeats over and over throughout her novels, with little variation. Typically in each of Thompson's Oz novels, a child (usually from America) and a supernatural companion (usually a talking animal), while traveling through Oz or one of the neighboring regions, find themselves in an obscure community where the inhabitants engage in a single activity. The inhabitants of this community then capture the travelers, and force them to participate in this same activity.
Another major theme has elderly characters, most controversially, the Good Witch of the North, being restored to "marriageable" age, possibly because Thompson herself never married. She had a greater tendency toward the use of romantic love stories (which Baum usually avoided in his fairy tales, with about four exceptions). While Baum's child protagonists tended to be little girls, Thompson's were boys.〔Greene and Martin, p. 76.〕 She emphasized humor to a greater extent than Baum did, and always considered her work for children, whereas Baum, while first and foremost considering his child audience, knew that his readership comprised all ages.
Thompson's last Oz story, ''The Enchanted Island of Oz'' (1976), was not originally written as an Oz book.

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