Alice-Leone Moats was an American journalist and author who was born in Mexico to wealthy and socially prominent American parents.
Background
Moats was born in Mexico to American parents. Moats grew up in a family with servants. Her father was a businessman who owned a lumber business in Mexico City.
Her mother made her learn five languages as a child.
Education
She attended convent schools in Mexico City, Rome and Paris, as well as the Brearley School in Manhattan and the Fermata School for Girls in Aiken, South Carolina. Moats completed high school in Mexico and at the Fermata School in Aiken, South Carolina (U.S.)
Career
She was the only child. Her family were rich and lived in luxury. Moats enrolled at the Brearley School in New York as a ten-year-old, later moving on to schools in Rome and Paris.
She then got admission into Oxford University.
However, her stay at Oxford lasted only three days. Mission Moats began her writing career in 1933 when she was commissioned to write Number Nice Girl Swears, a somewhat tongue-in-cheek book of etiquette.
She then served as a foreign correspondent for Collier"s magazine in Japan, China, the Soviet Union, and other countries. She later became a columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer.
A political conservative, and Roman Catholic, she contributed to the National Review in the 1960s.
After several decades of reporting, traveling to countries that were war zones, and writing nine books and hundreds of magazine articles, Mission Moats limiting her writing in her last decade to a column she wrote for the Commentary page of The Inquirer. The column was a huge hit. Many newspapers syndicated her columns.
She used her acerbic, witty, and disposed style to cover topics such as international politics or profiling a simple civil servant she metropolitan
Although she wrote quite frequently on political issues, Mission Moats did not like to be hemmed in by choosing between Democrat and Republican. Even in her last column she criticized the feminists of the her country for failing to rally behind United States. Senator.
Nancy Kassebaum, who had voted against the appointment of John Tower as secretary of defense. lieutenant is interesting to note that the author of a book entitled Number Nice Girl Swears was stubborn, argumentative, and uncompromisingly honest.
Though she claimed to have been engaged eight times, Mission Moats never married.