Mary Higgins Clark Free Pdf Download

American novelist and writer

Mary Higgins Clark

Higgins Clark at the Mazza Museum in 2012

Higgins Clark at the Mazza Museum in 2012

Born Mary Theresa Eleanor Higgins
(1927-12-24)December 24, 1927
Bronx, New York, the.U.S.
Died January 31, 2020(2020-01-31) (aged 92)
Naples, Florida, U.S.
Resting place Gate of Heaven Cemetery
Hawthorne, New York
Pen name Mary Higgins Clark
Occupation Novelist
Alma mater Fordham University
Period 1975–2020
Genre Suspense, mystery, psychological thriller
Spouse

Warren Clark

(m. 1949; died 1964)


Raymond Ploetz

(m. 1978; annulled 1986)


John J. Conheeney

(m. 1996; died 2018)

Children 5, including Carol Higgins Clark
Website
maryhigginsclark.com

Mary Theresa Eleanor Higgins Clark [1] (December 24, 1927 – January 31, 2020)[2] was an American author of suspense novels. Each of her 51 books was a bestseller in the United States and various European countries, and all of her novels remained in print as of 2015[update], with her debut suspense novel, Where Are the Children?, in its seventy-fifth printing.

Higgins Clark began writing at an early age. After several years working as a secretary and copy editor, she spent a year as a stewardess for Pan-American Airlines before leaving her job to marry and start a family. She supplemented the family's income by writing short stories. After her husband died in 1964, Higgins Clark worked for many years writing four-minute radio scripts until her agent persuaded her to try writing novels. Her debut novel, a fictionalized account of the life of George Washington, did not sell well, and she decided to exploit her love of mystery/suspense novels. Her suspense novels became very popular, and have sold more than 100 million copies in the United States alone.[3] Her daughter Carol Higgins Clark and former daughter-in-law Mary Jane Clark, are also writers.

Early life [edit]

Mary Theresa Eleanor Higgins was born on Christmas Eve 1927, although some sources mistakenly cite 1929 as the year,[4] the second child and only daughter of Nora C. (Durkin) and Luke Joseph Higgins.[5] Her father was an Irish immigrant and her mother was American-born, also of Irish descent.[6] The United States census gives her age in April 1940 as 12, which indicates her year of birth is 1927, as that was her age at her last birthday, the question asked by census enumerators.[7]

She was born about a year and a half after the birth of her older brother, Joseph. Her younger brother John, followed three years later.[8] Even as a small child, she was interested in writing, composing her first poem at age seven and often crafting short plays for her friends to enact.[9] She began keeping a journal when she was seven years old, noting in her first entry, "Nothing much happened today."[10]

The family lived off the earnings from their Irish pub and were fairly well-off, owning a home in the Bronx and a summer cottage on Long Island Sound.[11] [12] Although the Great Depression began when Higgins Clark was still a baby, her family was initially not affected, and even insisted on feeding the men who knocked on their door looking for work.[13] By the time Higgins Clark was ten, however, the family began to experience financial trouble, as many of their customers were unable to pay the bar tabs they had run up.[10] Higgins Clark's father was forced to lay off several employees and work longer hours, spending no more than a few hours at home each day. The family was thrown into further turmoil in 1939, when young Mary returned home from an early Mass to discover that her father had died in his sleep.[6]

Nora Higgins, now a widow with three young children to support, soon discovered that few employers were willing to hire a 52-year-old woman who had not held a job in over fourteen years.[14] To pay the bills, Higgins Clark was forced to move out of her bedroom so that her mother could rent it out to paying boarders.[15] Six months after their father's death, Higgins Clark's older brother cut his foot on a piece of metal and contracted severe osteomyelitis. Higgins Clark and her mother prayed constantly for him, and their neighbors came en masse to give blood for the many transfusions the young boy needed. Despite the dire predictions of the doctors, Joseph Higgins survived. Higgins Clark credits his recovery to the power of their prayers.[16]

When Higgins Clark graduated from Saint Francis Xavier Grammar School, she received a scholarship to continue her education at the Villa Maria Academy, a school run by the nuns of the Congregation de Notre Dame de Montreal.[17] There, the principal and other teachers encouraged Higgins Clark to develop her writing, although they were somewhat less than pleased when she began spending her class time writing stories instead of paying attention to the lesson.[9] At sixteen, Higgins Clark made her first attempt at publishing her work, sending an entry to True Confessions, which was rejected.[18]

To help pay the bills, she worked as a switchboard operator at the Shelton Hotel, where she often listened in to the residents' conversations. In her memoir she recalls spending much time eavesdropping on Tennessee Williams but complained that he never said anything interesting. On her days off, Higgins Clark would window shop, mentally choosing the clothes she would wear when she finally became a famous writer.[19]

Despite Higgins Clark's contribution to the family finances, the money her mother earned babysitting[20] was not enough, and the family lost their house and moved into a small three-room apartment. When Joseph graduated from high school in 1944, he immediately enlisted in the Navy, both to serve his country during war and to help his mother pay her bills. Six months after his enlistment he contracted spinal meningitis and died.[21] Although the family mourned Joseph's death deeply, as his dependent, Nora was guaranteed a life pension and no longer needed her daughter's help to pay the bills.[22]

Early career [edit]

Soon after Joseph died, Higgins Clark graduated from high school and attended Wood Secretarial School on a partial scholarship. After completing her coursework the following year, she accepted a job as the secretary to the head of the creative department in the internal advertising division at Remington Rand.[23] She soon enrolled in evening classes to learn more about advertising and promotion. Her growing skills, as well as her natural beauty, were noticed by her boss and others in the company, and her job was expanded to include writing catalog copy (alongside future novelist Joseph Heller) and to model for the company brochures with a then unknown Grace Kelly.[24]

Although she enjoyed her job, Higgins Clark's imagination was sparked by an acquaintance's casual comment, "God, it was beastly hot in Calcutta."[25] Inspired to become a flight attendant like her acquaintance, Higgins Clark underwent rigorous interviews to earn a position as a flight attendant (then known as stewardess) for Pan American Airlines, making five dollars fewer a week than her secretarial job.[26] Her supervisor at Remington Rand hosted a goodbye dinner for her, and Higgins Clark invited her neighbor, Warren Clark, whom she had admired for years, to be her date. By the end of the evening Warren Clark had informed her that he thought she should work as a stewardess for a year, and then they should be married the following Christmas. Higgins Clark accepted the somewhat unorthodox proposal.[27]

For most of 1949, she worked the Pan Am international flights, traveling through Europe, Africa, and Asia. One of her flights became the last flight allowed into Czechoslovakia before the Iron Curtain fell.[4] On another of her flights, Higgins Clark escorted a four-year-old orphan down the steps of the airplane into the waiting arms of her adoptive mother, a scene that was heavily televised.[28]

At the end of her year of flying, on December 26, 1949, Higgins Clark happily gave up her career to marry Warren Clark.[29] To occupy herself, she began taking writing courses at NYU[18] and, with some of her classmates, formed a writing workshop in which the members would critique each other's works-in-progress. The workshop, which persisted for almost forty years, met weekly. At each meeting two members would have twenty minutes each to present their latest work. The other members would then have three minutes each to offer constructive criticism.[30]

One of her professors at NYU told the class they should develop plot ideas by reading newspapers and asking themselves prompts such as, "Suppose...?" and "What if...?" She has said that she still gets many of her ideas by utilizing said prompts, along with "Why?".[31] For her first NYU writing assignment she used this method to expand her own experiences into a short story called "Stowaway" about a stewardess who finds a stowaway from Czechoslovakia on her plane.[32] Although her professor offered high praise for the story, Higgins Clark was continually frustrated in her attempts to find a publisher. Finally, in 1956, after six years and forty rejections, Extension Magazine agreed to purchase the story for $100.[4]

While those six years were devoid of professional milestones, on a personal level Higgins Clark and her husband were very busy. Their first child, Marilyn, was born nine months after their wedding, with Warren Jr. arriving thirteen months later. A third child, David, was born two years after his brother. Two months after Higgins Clark's short story sold, the fourth baby made her appearance and was promptly named Carol, after the heroine in her mother's story.[33] After selling that first short story, Higgins Clark began regularly finding homes for her works. Through the writer's workshop she met an agent, Patricia Schartle Myrer, who represented Higgins Clark for twenty years until her retirement. They became such good friends that Higgins Clark named her fifth and last child for her.[34] While Warren worked and Higgins Clark wrote, they encouraged their children to find ways to earn money as well, with all five children eventually taking professional acting and modeling jobs. Young Patty served as a Gerber Baby, while David was featured in a national United Way ad. Higgins Clark herself filmed a television commercial for Fab laundry detergent. The commercial, which aired during the I Love Lucy show, earned her enough money that she and Warren were able to take a trip to Hawaii.[35]

In 1959, Warren Clark was diagnosed with severe angina, and, although he curtailed his activities on his doctor's order, he suffered three heart attacks within the next five years, each time returning from the hospital in poorer health. After the last heart attack in 1964, they felt that Warren would be unable to work again, so Higgins Clark called a friend who wrote scripts for radio shows to see if there were any job openings. The day that she accepted a job writing the radio segment "Portrait of a Patriot," Warren suffered a fatal heart attack. His mother, who was visiting at the time, collapsed at his bedside upon discovering that he was dead. In one night, Higgins Clark lost both her husband and her mother-in-law.[36]

Aspire to the Heavens [edit]

Higgins Clark's initial contract to be a radio scriptwriter obligated her to write 65 four-minute programs for the "Portrait of a Patriot" series. Her work was good enough that she was soon asked to write two other radio series. This experience of fitting an entire sketch into four minutes taught Higgins Clark how to write cleanly and succinctly, traits that are incredibly important to a suspense novel, which must advance the plot with every paragraph.[37] Despite the security offered by her new job, money was tight in the beginning as she strove to raise five children aged five to thirteen alone. For their first Christmas without Warren, Higgins Clark's only gifts to her children were personalized poems describing the things she wished she could have purchased for them.[38]

By the late 1960s, the short story market had collapsed. The Saturday Evening Post, which in 1960 named Higgins Clark's short story "Beauty Contest at Buckingham" one of their ten best of the year, was in serious financial straits and had decided to stop publishing fiction, and many of the popular women's magazines were also dropping or cutting back on fiction, focusing on self-help articles instead.[39] Because her short stories were no longer able to find a publisher, Higgins Clark's agent suggested that she try writing a full-length novel.[18] Using her research and experience with the Portraits of a Patriot series, Higgins Clark spent the next three years writing a fictionalized account of the relationship between George and Martha Washington, Aspire to the Heavens. It is about George Washington and the love for his house.[20] Although it was sold for only a small advance, its acceptance gave Higgins Clark confidence that she could indeed finish a full-length book and find a publisher.[9] The novel "was remaindered as it came off the press,"[4] and, to make matters worse, four months after the publication of the novel, Mary's mother, Nora, died.[40]

To ensure that her children would not have to struggle financially, Higgins Clark was determined that they should have good educations. To provide a good example she entered Fordham University at Lincoln Center in 1971, graduating summa cum laude in 1979, with a BA in philosophy.[4] Her children followed her example. The two eldest, Marilyn and Warren, have become judges, and Patty works at the Mercantile Exchange in New York City. David is the president and CEO of Talk Marketing Enterprises, Inc, and Carol has authored many popular suspense novels.[20]

During this time Higgins Clark became increasingly frustrated with her employer, and, although two of her children were partially dependent on her for their college tuition, she quit her job and joined two of her former colleagues in forming their own company to write and market radio scripts. To scrape up the $5000 she needed to start the business, Higgins Clark was forced to pawn her engagement ring, and, for the eight months it took the company to become profitable, she did not receive a salary, further straining the family finances.[41]

Higgins Clark continued writing even during these hard times.

Suspense genre [edit]

Encouraged by her agent to try writing another book, Higgins Clark returned to the suspense stories that she loved as a child and which had provided her first success as a short story writer. While she was in the midst of writing the story, her younger brother Johnny died, leaving her the sole surviving member of her family. To temporarily forget her heartache, Higgins Clark threw herself into her writing, and soon finished the novel.[42] Very quickly after the novel, Where are the Children? was completed, Simon & Schuster agreed to purchase it for the relatively small sum of $3000. Three months later, in July 1974, Higgins Clark received word that the paperback rights for the novel had sold for one hundred thousand dollars. For the first time in many years, she had no immediate financial worries.[43] Where Are the Children? became a bestseller and was favorably reviewed.[4] Two years after its publication Higgins Clark sold her second suspense novel for $1.5 million.[38]

Since 2010, Paris-based La Sabotière have been producing a series of her crime novel as television films. Mary Higgins Clark crime novel anthology series was placed into development in October 2019 under a partnership between Montreal-based Reel One Entertainment, U.S. producer Element 8 Entertainment and La Sabotière. The first season is slated to be based on I'll Be Seeing You and, attached as writer and executive producer is Ilene Rosenzweig.[44]

Other writings [edit]

Higgins Clark's debut novel about George Washington, Aspire to the Heavens was retitled Mount Vernon Love Story and rereleased in 2002, the same year as her autobiography, Kitchen Privileges, which relied heavily on the journals she has kept all of her life.[3] [20] In 2006, she announced that she would be fulfilling one of her dreams by publishing her first children's book. Ghost Ship was published by Simon & Schuster, who have published her suspense novels.[18] [45]

She has written several Christmas-themed mystery novels with her daughter, Carol. Although popular with readers, some critics have complained that the books are of lesser quality because the tone is much lighter than her solo output.[ citation needed ]

Later life [edit]

Higgins Clark dated throughout her widowhood. She described her second marriage (1978–1986) to Raymond Ploetz as "disastrous," and had it annulled.[38] [46]

In 1996, she married John J. Conheeney after they were introduced by her daughter, Patty.[30] John J Conheeney died at age 89 on October 8, 2018.[47] He was the retired CEO of Merrill Lynch Futures,[4] The couple lived in Saddle River, New Jersey, (Mary having first moved to New Jersey in 1956 when she and her first husband bought a home in Washington Township, Bergen County, New Jersey).[48] [49] They had other homes in Manhattan; Spring Lake, New Jersey; and Dennis, Massachusetts.[4]

In 1981, Higgins Clark happened to be in Washington, D.C., the day President Ronald Reagan was shot. Because she had a press pass she was able to join the media waiting to hear the President's prognosis. When the doctor finally arrived to start the press conference, Higgins Clark was one of the few people chosen to ask a question.[9]

In 2011, she served as the Grand Marshal of the St. Patrick's Day Parade in New York City.[ citation needed ]

Higgins Clark died in Naples, Florida, on January 31, 2020, the day the UK left the EU.[1] [50]

Success [edit]

Popular reception [edit]

Higgins Clark has had over 50 novels published, with millions of copies sold throughout the United States.

In 2001, the hardcover edition of Higgins Clark's On the Street Where You Live was Number One on the New York Times Hardcover Bestseller list at the same time that the paperback version of her novel Before I Say Good-bye reached Number One on the New York Times Paperback Bestseller list.[51]

Her books have been bestsellers in France,[30] and have earned her the distinction of being named a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters in France in 2000. She has been honored in France with the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière (1980) and the Deauville Film Festival Literary Award (1999).[52] She was awarded the AIHS Gold Medal from the American Irish Historical Society, which is awarded to an Irish-American or Irish-national of significant accomplishment.[53]

Many of the books deal with crimes involving children or with telepathy.[54]

While Higgins Clark was aware that many people claiming to be psychics are behaving fraudulently, she believed that she had met people with genuine ESP powers. Nora Higgins, on looking at a photo of her eighteen-year-old son in his brand new Navy dress blues told Mary that "He has death in his eyes", and the young man died shortly after. A psychic Higgins Clark visited just as her second novel, Where Are the Children, was being published in paperback told her that she would become very famous and make a great deal of money. Although at the time she laughed off the prediction, the following week her novel reached the bestseller lists and she sold the movie rights shortly after, truly launching her career.[30]

Critical reception [edit]

Higgins Clark won numerous awards for her writing. In addition to those previously referenced, she won the Horatio Alger Award (1997) and the Passionists' Ethics in Literature Award (2002), as well as the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University Spirit of Achievement Award (1994) and the National Arts Club's Gold Medal in Education (1994). She was awarded eighteen honorary doctorates, including one from her alma mater, Fordham University. Her success was also recognized by groups representing her heritage. The American Irish Historical Society granted her the Gold Medal of Honor in 1993, and in 2001 she won the Ellis Island Medal of Honor. She was named a Bronx Legend (1999).[52]

Mary Higgins Clark served as the Chairman of the International Crime Congress in 1988 and was the 1987 president of the Mystery Writers of America. For many years she served on the board of directors of the Mystery Writers of America. Simon & Schuster, which have published all of Higgins Clark's novels and in the late 1990s signed her to a $64-million, four-book contract,[30] have funded the Mary Higgins Clark Award, given by the Mystery Writers of America to authors of suspense fiction.[3] [55] The announcement that an award would be given in her honor was made at the 55th Annual Edgar Allan Poe Awards, where Higgins Clark was inducted as a Grand Master.[55]

Higgins Clark was made a Dame of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, and was honored as a Dame of Malta and a Dame of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre.[30] The Franciscan Friars gave her a Graymoor Award (1999) and she was awarded a Christopher Life Achievement Award. She served as a board member for the Catholic Communal Fund and as a member of the Board of Governors at Hackensack Hospital.[56]

Higgins Clark was inducted into the Irish America Hall of Fame in March 2011.[57]

Bibliography [edit]

Fiction [edit]

Standalone stories [edit]

  • 1968 Aspire to the Heavens (reissued in 2000 as Mount Vernon Love Story)
  • 1975 Where Are the Children?
  • 1977 A Stranger is Watching
  • 1980 The Cradle Will Fall
  • 1982 A Cry in the Night
  • 1984 Stillwatch
  • 1986 Murder in Manhattan(co-author Thomas Chastain)
  • 1987 Terror Stalks The Class Reunion (short story)
  • 1987 Murder On The Aisle (short story)
  • 1987 Weep No More, My Lady
  • 1988 Caribbean Blues
  • 1988 Double Vision (short story)
  • 1989 While My Pretty One Sleeps
  • 1989 That's The Ticket (short story)
  • 1989 The Anastasia Syndrome and Other Stories
  • 1989 The Lost Angel (short story)
  • 1989 Death On The Cape (short story)
  • 1990 "Voices in the Coal Bin" (short story, only available as an audiobook with Carol Higgins Clark's That's the Ticket)
  • 1990 The Body in the Closet (short story)
  • 1991 Loves Music, Loves to Dance
  • 1992 All Around the Town
  • 1992 Missing in Manhattan (co-author Thomas Chastain)
  • 1993 I'll Be Seeing You
  • 1993 Death on the Cape and Other Stories
  • 1993 Milk Run and Stowaway (Two stories. Like "Voices in the Coal Bin", never officially published out of anthologies)
  • 1994 Remember Me
  • 1995 Let Me Call You Sweetheart
  • 1995 Justice in Manhattan (co-author Thomas Chastain)
  • 1995 Silent Night
  • 1995 Bad Behavior
  • 1996 Moonlight Becomes You
  • 1996 Mother
  • 1996 My Gal Sunday: Henry and Sunday Stories
  • 1997 Pretend You Don't See Her
  • 1998 You Belong to Me
  • 1999 We'll Meet Again
  • 1999 The Night Awakens
  • 1999 The Plot Thickens(editor)
  • 2000 Before I Say Good-Bye
  • 2001 On the Street Where You Live
  • 2001 He Sees You When You're Sleeping (with daughter Carol Higgins Clark)
  • 2002 Daddy's Little Girl
  • 2002 Murder in the Family
  • 2003 The Second Time Around
  • 2004 Nighttime Is My Time
  • 2005 No Place Like Home
  • 2006 Two Little Girls in Blue
  • 2007 Ghost Ship: A Cape Cod Story
  • 2007 I Heard That Song Before
  • 2008 Where Are You Now?
  • 2009 Just Take My Heart
  • 2010 The Shadow of Your Smile
  • 2011 The Magical Christmas Horse (illustrated by Wendell Minor)
  • 2013 Daddy's Gone a Hunting
  • 2013 Plot Thickens
  • 2015 The Melody Lingers On
  • 2016 Death Wears a Beauty Mask and Other Stories
  • 2018 I've Got My Eyes on You
  • 2019 Kiss the Girls and Make Them Cry

Alvirah and Willy series [edit]

Focuses on Alvirah Meehan, a lottery winner, and her husband Willy, a plumber, as they solve many crimes and murders.

  • 1987 Weep No More, My Lady
  • 1992 Plumbing For Willy
  • 1994 The Lottery Winner and Other Stories
  • 1998 All Through the Night
  • 2000 Deck the Halls (with daughter Carol Higgins Clark, crossover with Carol's main protagonist Reagan Reilly, a female private investigator)
  • 2004 The Christmas Thief (with daughter Carol Higgins Clark, crossover with Carol's main protagonist Reagan Reilly)
  • 2006 Santa Cruise: A Holiday Mystery at Sea (with daughter Carol Higgins Clark, crossover with Carol's main protagonist Reagan Reilly)
  • 2008 Dashing Through the Snow (with daughter Carol Higgins Clark, crossover with Carol's main protagonist Reagan Reilly)
  • 2011 I'll Walk Alone
  • 2012 The Lost Years
  • 2016 As Time Goes By
  • 2017 All By Myself, Alone [58]

Under Suspicion series [edit]

Focuses on Laurie Moran, producer on the television series "Under Suspicion", a documentary program which investigates unsolved cold cases.

  • 2014 I've Got You Under My Skin
  • 2014 The Cinderella Murder (co-authored with Alafair Burke)
  • 2015 All Dressed in White (co-authored with Alafair Burke)
  • 2016 The Sleeping Beauty Killer (co-authored with Alafair Burke)
  • 2017 Every Breath You Take (co-authored with Alafair Burke)
  • 2018 You Don't Own Me (co-authored with Alafair Burke)[59]
  • 2020 Piece of My Heart (co-authored with Alafair Burke)

Non-fiction [edit]

  • 2001 Kitchen Privileges: A Memoir

Adaptations [edit]

Theatrical film adaptations [edit]

  • 1982 A Stranger Is Watching
  • 1986 Where Are the Children?

Selected television adaptations [edit]

  • 1983 The Cradle Will Fall
  • 1987 Stillwatch
  • 1992 Double Vision
  • 1992 Terror Stalks the Class Reunion [fr]
  • 1992 A Cry in the Night
  • 1992 Weep no more My Lady
  • 1995 Remember Me(1995 film)
  • 1997 Let Me Call You Sweetheart
  • 1997 While My Pretty One Sleeps
  • 1998 Moonlight Becomes You
  • 2001 You Belong to Me
  • 2001 Loves Music, Loves to Dance
  • 2002 Pretend You Don't See Her
  • 2002 Haven't We Met Before?
  • 2002 Lucky Day
  • 2002 All Around Town
  • 2002 We'll Meet Again
  • 2002 He Sees You When You're Sleeping
  • 2003 A Crime of Passion
  • 2003 Before I'll say Goodbye
  • 2004 I'll Be Seeing You
  • 2004 Try to Remember
  • 2004 The Cradle will fall
  • 2004 Try To Remember
  • 2011 Deck the Halls
  • 2013 The Mystery Cruise
  • 2013 Toi que j'aimais tant (Daddy's Little Girl)
  • 2014 My Gal Sunday
  • 2014 Où es-tu maintenant Based on Where Are You Now?
  • 2014 Deux petites filles en bleu (Two Little Girls in blue)
  • 2015 Souviens-toi (Remember me)
  • 2015 La clinique du docteur H
  • 2015 Les années perdues (The Lost Years)
  • 2018 Rien ne vaut la douceur du foyer (No Place like Home)
  • 2018 Ce que vivent les roses (Let me call you Sweetheart)

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b NJ.com, Noah Cohen (February 1, 2020). "Mary Higgins Clark, bestselling mystery author who called N.J. home, dies at 92". nj.com . Retrieved February 1, 2020.
  2. ^ Great Women Mystery Writers, 2nd Ed. by Elizabeth Blakesley Lindsay, page 40, 2007, Greenwood Press; ISBN 0-313-33428-5
  3. ^ a b c "Mary Higgins Clark". Simon & Schuster. Archived from the original on December 18, 2007. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Bruns, Ann (May 5, 2000). "Mary Higgins Clark Biodata". bookreporter.com. The Book Report, Inc. Retrieved July 4, 2009.
  5. ^ De Roche, Linda (2011). Mary Higgins Clark: Life and Letters. ABC-CLIO. p. 1. ISBN978-0-313-36637-6.
  6. ^ a b Mary Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 16–17.
  7. ^ 1940 United States census extract:
    Name: Mary Higgins
    Age: 12
    Estimated birth year: abt 1928
    Gender: Female
    Race: White
    Birthplace: New York
    Marital Status: Single
    Relation to Head of House: Daughter
    Home in 1940: New York, Bronx, New York
    Map of Home in 1940: View Map
    Street: Tenbroeck Avenue
    House Number: 1913
    Inferred Residence in 1935: New York, Bronx, New York
    Residence in 1935: Same House
    Sheet Number: 9B
    Attended School or College: Yes
    Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 6th grade
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Household Members:
    Nora Higgins 52
    Joseph Higgins 13
    Mary Higgins 12
    John Higgins 8
    Herbert Katz 21
    Source Citation: Year: 1940; Census Place: New York, Bronx, New York; Roll: T627_2481; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 3-819. Source Information: Ancestry.com. 1940 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012. Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1940. T627, 4,643 rolls.
  8. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 1.
  9. ^ a b c d Levitsky, Jennifer; Niloufar Motamed (April 21, 1998). "Mary Higgins Clark Interview". Book Reporter. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  10. ^ a b Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 13.
  11. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 2.
  12. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 18.
  13. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 3.
  14. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 20.
  15. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 24.
  16. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 32.
  17. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 2, 37.
  18. ^ a b c d Welch, Dave (May 13, 1999). "Mary Higgins Clark Reveals: "Pan Am was the airline."". Powells.com. Powell's Books. Archived from the original on May 11, 2009. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  19. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 40–42.
  20. ^ a b c d "Mary Higgins Clark Q&A". Simon & Schuster. Archived from the original on January 3, 2008. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  21. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 43–45.
  22. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 84.
  23. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 47–48.
  24. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 48–49, 53.
  25. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 53.
  26. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 57.
  27. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 60–62.
  28. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 65.
  29. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 72.
  30. ^ a b c d e f White, Claire E. "A Conversation with Mary Higgins Clark". Writers Write. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  31. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 86.
  32. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 89.
  33. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 86, 95, 97, 106.
  34. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 107.
  35. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 117, 119–122.
  36. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 109–111, 114–115.
  37. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 125, 150–53.
  38. ^ a b c Brady, Lois Smith (December 8, 1996). "Mary Higgins Clark & John Conheeney marry". New York Times . Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  39. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 122, 125, 156.
  40. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 181.
  41. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 188.
  42. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, p. 177, 192–193.
  43. ^ Higgins Clark, Kitchen Privileges, pp. 195–196.
  44. ^ Dams, Tim (October 15, 2019). "Reel One, Element 8 and La Sabotière to Develop Mary Higgins Clark's Crime Novels". Variety . Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  45. ^ "Internationally Bestselling Author Mary Higgins Clark to Publish Her First Children's Book With Simon & Schuster". Simon & Schuster. August 10, 2006. Retrieved February 13, 2007.
  46. ^ Lipton, Michael (November 2, 1992). "Murders, They Write". People.
  47. ^ "John Conheeney Obituary". The New York Times. October 10, 2018 – via Legacy.com.
  48. ^ Horner, Shirley. "New Jersey Q & A: Mary Higgins Clark; From a Life in New Jersey, Best-Selling Mysteries", The New York Times, October 18, 1992; accessed December 22, 2013. "Ms. Clark first moved to New Jersey -- to Washington Township -- in 1956."
  49. ^ Geiger, Mia. "Suspense queen sailing two ships", The Denver Post, April 6, 2007. Accessed May 14, 2007. "It seemed only natural for Higgins Clark to set the story on Cape Cod, a place that feels magical to the Saddle River, N.J., resident."
  50. ^ Verongos, Helen T. (February 1, 2020). "Mary Higgins Clark, Best-Selling Queen of Suspense, Dies at 92". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  51. ^ Bruns, Ann (June 5, 2001). "Mary Higgins Clark". Teen Reads. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  52. ^ a b "Mary Higgins Clark". The Harry Walker Agency, Inc. Archived from the original on October 15, 2007. Retrieved April 23, 2007.
  53. ^ AIHS Gold Medal Awardees
  54. ^ "Two Little Girls in Blue". Publishers Weekly. February 27, 2006. Retrieved February 13, 2007. [ permanent dead link ]
  55. ^ a b "The Mary Higgins Clark Award". Mystery Writers of America. Archived from the original on October 4, 2006. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  56. ^ "Facts About Mary". Simon & Schuster Canada. Archived from the original on December 27, 2008. Retrieved April 23, 2007.
  57. ^ Harty, Patricia. "The Bestselling Author is Proud to Call Herself An Irish Girl From the Bronx", Irish America, March 10, 2011; accessed March 22, 2011. "The oldest living resident of New York died recently at age 111 and in a New York Times article only months earlier, she told the reporter that she had kept her mind alert by reading Agatha Christie and Mary Higgins Clark."
  58. ^ "All By Myself, Alone by Mary Higgins Clark". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved January 29, 2017.
  59. ^ "You Don't Own Me". Fantastic Fiction. Archived from the original on April 27, 2018. Retrieved April 27, 2018.

Further reading [edit]

  • Higgins Clark, Mary, Kitchen Privileges: A Memoir, Simon & Schuster (2002); 224 pages; ISBN 0743412613/ISBN 978-0743412612; reprint edition Gallery Books (October 21, 2003).

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Modern Signed Books Rodger Nichols interviews Mary Higgins Clark, May 2018
  • Mary Higgins Clark interviewed at the Bouchercon 27 World Mystery Convention in St. Paul in October 1996, Northern Lights TV Series #363 (1996):  [https://reflections.mndigital.org/catalog/p16022coll38:176#/kaltura_video]

Posted by: florindaflorindauebaldoea0251835.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Higgins_Clark

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