Background
Ruth Suckow was born on August 6, 1892, in Hawarden, Iowa, United States. She was a daughter of William John Suckow, a Congregational minister, and Anna (Kluckhohn) Suckow.
1115 8th Ave, Grinnell, IA 50112, United States
From 1910 to 1913, Ruth studied at Grinnell College, and in 1931, she received a Master of Arts there.
1071 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, MA 02186, United States
Ruth attended Curry Dramatic School (now Curry College) from 1914 to 1915.
2199 S University Blvd, Denver, CO 80208, United States
In 1917, Ruth received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Denver, and a Master of Arts in 1918.
essayist novelist memoirist author
Ruth Suckow was born on August 6, 1892, in Hawarden, Iowa, United States. She was a daughter of William John Suckow, a Congregational minister, and Anna (Kluckhohn) Suckow.
Ruth graduated from Grinnell High School and pursued a degree at Grinnell College in 1910. Finding that the school's curriculum did not support her ambitions to become an actress, Suckow transferred at the end of her junior year to the Curry School of Expression (nowadays Curry College) in Boston where she studied for another two years. Later she joined her mother and ailing sister in Denver, Colorado. There she earned both bachelor's and master's degrees in English from the University of Denver and redirected her artistic course to writing.
While in Denver, Suckow studied bee keeping, and published her first poems. She returned to Iowa to live with her father after her mother's death in 1919, and spent the next six years raising bees and making honey, writing poems, and creating a series of short stories set in rural and small-town Iowa. These stories were the genesis of the literary career on which her reputation as a regional writer is based.
Suckow first achieved notice after the 1921 publication of her short story "Uprooted" brought her to the attention of journalist H.L. Mencken. Mencken promoted her with enthusiasm in The Smart Set, which led to the serialization of her novella Country People in The Century Magazine in 1924. Publishers Alfred and Blanche Knopf turned it into a book later that year, and also collected her first stories under the title Iowa Interiors in 1926.
The same year Iowa Interiors appeared, Suckow moved to New York City, where she capitalized on her growing reputation with three more novels in the period of four years. These works - The Bonney Family (1928), Cora (1929), and The Kramer Girls (1930) - featured young Midwestern women attempting to create identities for themselves separate from the expectations of family and friends. While lacking in consistency, the stories confronted real-life problems with an honesty that demonstrated the absence of easy solutions.
Suckow spent most of the first five years of her marriage living in California, New Mexico, and Iowa. Throughout this nomadic existence, Suckow was at work on what would be her summary work, The Folks, published in 1934. This longest of her novels covered the time between the beginning of the 20th century to the Depression in the life of the Ferguson family, and was equally as sweeping in its portrayal of the emotional relationships of its characters.
Although Suckow produced novels and stories after 1935, her output thereafter was comparatively slender. Her husband took a post in the Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C., and Suckow served on the Farm Tenancy Committee as an appointee of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936. The next year found them again in Iowa, where they continued writing and promoting the arts. She also published a nostalgic novel about an Iowa community, New Hope, in 1942.
Suckow's suffering from arthritis in the 1940s necessitated a warmer climate, so she moved with her husband to Tucson, Arizona, in 1948. Their last home was in Claremont, California, to which they had relocated in 1952. She completed her last novel, The John Wood Case, in Claremont in 1959, and died at home eight years later.
(The novel has the impact of simple and profound human dra...)
1959(A dozen stories describe the lives of individuals who fin...)
1988Suckow became known for her ability to capture the plight of her characters in a swift, dramatic fashion, as well as for her acute, unsentimental vision of rural life. The exploration of family ties and their emotional relationships was the bedrock of Suckow's fiction, and all her works vividly convey the complicated emotions those relationships engender. She demonstrated her greatest versatility in her ability to portray both the old and the young in her work.
Suckow maintained contact with literary friends such as Robert Frost, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, and Norwegian novelist Sigrid Undset.
Quotes from others about the person
"Suckow was unquestionably the most remarkable woman writing stories in the republic." - H. L. Mencken
In March 1929, Suckow married Ferner Nuhn, a writer.