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American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Janet Lambert (December 1893 – March 16, 1973) was an American actress and the author of 54 young-adult fiction titles for girls from 1941 to 1969. Lambert's works, best known for the Penny and Tippy Parrish series, focused on the lives and coming-of-age choices of the wives and children, especially the daughters, of U.S. Army officers during World War II and the Korean War-era.
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Lambert was born Maude Janet "Dodi" Snyder December 12 or 17, 1893 in or near Crawfordsville, Indiana, the daughter of Mabel Galey and Francis Leonidas Snyder.
She married Kent Craig Lambert (1891–1982) on January 1, 1918. Kent, a brother of longtime Purdue basketball coach, Ward Lambert, was a 1913 graduate of Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana. Serving in World War I, he continued his Army career as a cavalry officer. In World War II, he saw service in North Africa, Anzio and China. His last posting was as post commander of Fort Jay, Governors Island, in New York City where he retired at the rank of colonel in 1951 after 34 years active duty. A photograph of Janet and Kent's formal military farewell from Fort Jay and the Army illustrated the dust jacket of one of her books.
Lambert performed on the Broadway stage in the years before and during World War I.[1]
The couple had one daughter, Jeanne Anne Lambert (born 1918) who, much like a character in her mother's books, married a United States Military Academy graduate, Second Lieutenant Dean Titus Vanderhoef (USMA 1940), at Fort Jay's post chapel on July 27, 1940.
Between 1941 and 1969, Lambert published 54 books at a rate of about two per year, but is often omitted from discussions of early young adult romance literature by critics.[2]
Lambert integrated real-world events as background in her books, such as the reconstruction of Germany after World War II (Little Miss Atlas, 1949) and the Korean War (Don't Cry, Little Girl, 1952).[2] Lambert's life experience as an Army wife provided the background and settings for many of her books about the lives of teenage children of military officers. While the U.S. Military Academy figures appear frequently in the lives of her characters, her husband did not attend West Point, gaining his officer training through the National Guard and mid-level Army schools such at the United States Army Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kansas. In 1930, he was instructor at the Virginia Military Institute. Many of the male characters in Lambert's novels are soldiers or West Point students, and present a patriotic, "almost worshipful" view of the military.[2]
As for her female characters, often military wives or children, she drew on her experiences and observations as a military wife who had to balance career aspirations and married life.
Lambert died on March 16, 1973, at Beach Haven, New Jersey, and is buried in Crawfordsville, Indiana.[1]
Listed by series and years of original publication:
Penny Parrish novels
Tippy Parrish novels
Jordon novels
Parri MacDonald novels
Candy Kane novels
Dria Meredith novels
Campbell novels
Sugar Bradley novels
Christie Drayton novels
Patty and Ginger novels
Cinda Hollister novels
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