Mazo de la Roche

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Mazo de la Roche

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Mazo de la Roche , 1885-1961, Canadian novelist, b. Toronto. Her popular novel, Jalna (1927), was followed by a series depicting the history, through 150 years, of the vigorous Whiteoak family who lived at "Jalna." The series includes 16 novels; among them are Whiteoaks (1929), Finch's Fortune (1931), Young Renny (1935), Whiteoak Harvest (1936), Growth of a Man (1938), The Building of Jalna (1944), and Mary Wakefield (1949). Her dramatization of Whiteoaks was staged in London and New York. De la Roche also wrote plays, children's books, a history of Quebec, and an autobiography, Ringing the Changes (1957).

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Mazo Louise de la Roche

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Mazo Louise de la Roche

Mazo Louise de la Roche (1879-1961) was a Canadian author whose masterful and dramatic description of a family of Canadian country squires gained her international recognition.

Mazo de la Roche was born on Jan. 15, 1879, in the town of Newmarket near Toronto into a middle-class family. She was educated in suburban schools in and near Toronto and had firsthand experience with farm life when her family rented a homestead outside the town of Bronte, Ontario. Here the author, who had been writing stories for a number of years with little success, underwent formative experiences which helped to crystallize important ideas of a country squirearchy which would be central to her best-known work.

Her Work

Beginning her career as a writer of short stories, Mazo de la Roche published her first novel, Possession, in 1923 and had several plays produced in the 1920s. International popularity came with the publication of Jalna (1927), which won the $10,000 Atlantic-Little Brown Award that year and which launched the Whiteoak family and the story of its dynastic ups and downs through a series of widely published and much-translated novels.

Mazo de la Roche spent all of her creative life in Canada except for the years 1929-1939, when she lived abroad, mainly in England. Her published work includes 22 novels written between 1923 and 1960; a novella, A Boy in the House (1952); four works with an autobiographical background, of which Ringing the Changes (1957) is an important if misleading autobiography; five produced plays, from Low Life (1925) to The Mistress of Jalna (1951), and an adaptation of Whiteoaks of Jalna which was created for the stage in London and New York; short stories, many of which have been anthologized; a history of Quebec; and two books for children. She died in Toronto on July 13, 1961.

Whiteoak Family

The story of the Whiteoak family and of its ancestral seat of Jalna spans a period of a century; it is a masterful and imaginative portrayal of a large family of charactersoften seen as a rich gallery of eccentricsallowed to work out their lives against the backdrop of a genteel and idealized Ontario countryside. While the personages of the Whiteoak family are romantically conceived, they are, in the main, compelling characterizations of individuals, whose carefully constructed roles and situations are evoked by means of meticulous stage setting, psychological manipulation, and skillful and accurate description. Several of these in the Jalna gallery are real and memorable figures, and even the less significant characters benefit from the author's skill at allowing the nature of each individual to develop and grow while retaining a set of identifiable and basic qualities.

The major thrust of the Jalna series was to stave off the all-embracing sweep of a vulgar, democratized, and materialistic way of North American life and to celebrate and advance a set of low-key, aristocratic, but practical values. The sense of a spiritual connection with England is a strong and profoundly significant, if latent, motif.

There is some indication that while the novels of Mazo de la Roche enjoyed a favorable review press well into the 1930s, she was ultimately disappointed by what has been described as a lack of serious critical response to her writing. Another source of annoyance was that whenever an extended appraisal of the Jalna novels was attempted, it was usually developed in terms of a comparison with John Galswrothy's saga of the Forsyte family, an approach not borne out by the profound but readily apparent differences in the intentions, backgrounds, personalities, and social attitudes of the two writers.

Further Reading

The most satisfying study is Ronald Hambleton, Mazo de laRoche of Jalna (1966), a sympathetic and balanced assessment.

Additional Sources

Givner, Joan, Mazo de la Roche: the hidden life, Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1989.

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"Mazo Louise de la Roche." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 24 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 5/31/2009; ; 582 words ; No 35 Mazo de la Roche A favourite game is to ask friends to name their own forgotten author, and here's one that has come up time and again. Mazo de la Roche was a prolific Victorian Canadian, born in 1879 in Ontario. She...
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Magazine article from: ROM Magazine; 3/22/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...in Benares Historic House in Mississauga, the family home that provided the model for the Jalna series of books by Mazo de la Roche. There is a remote possibility that your figure may have come to Ontario with an early Jesuit missionary since the...
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 5/21/1989; 700+ words ; ...E.F. Benson's Lucia novels and Tom Holt's wonderful continuations of them. I readily admit that I promote Mazo de la Roche's delightful, though sentimental, saga of the Whiteoak family of Canada. Friends just nod their heads at this...
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/21/1990; 370 words ; ...A Washington Post Book World book bag will be sent to the winner. Answer to Book Bag #556: The Canadian writer Mazo De Le Roche wrote "Jalna" in 1927, the first of 16 novels about the Whiteoak family. Winner: G. Janet Tulloch, Washington...
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Newspaper article from: Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque); 8/2/2003; 520 words ; ...and playing piano and organ. She was an accomplished artist. She enjoyed reading, especially in the early years, Mazo de la Roche's Jalna series and Charles Dickens' "Tale of Two Cities" and "Required 10th Grade Reading for the Greatest Generation...
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Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2008; 413 words ; ...studies of Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, Carol Shields, and earlier authors Pauline Johnson, Stephen Leacock, Mazo de la Roche, and Lucy Maud Montgomery, she discusses how each has responded to fame and how citizenship has played a key role...
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Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 6/23/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...combines her father's name, Raul, and the title of her mother's favorite book, "Jalna," by Canadian novelist Mazo de la Roche -- now plays about 125 concert dates a year. Along with her longtime singing partner and ex-husband, Guy Hovis...
Arts: Theatre: Debut - Anthony Valentine THE ROLE: THE BOY THE PLAY: WHITEOAKS THE THEATRE: BROMLEY THEATRE
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/20/2000; ; 600 words ; ...door..." Anyway, she took me on and got me my professional debut in Whiteoaks, a stage version of the popular Mazo de la Roche family saga. I had to look after the spaniel in the production and I remember I spent too much time out the back...

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