Zelda Popkin

Zelda Popkin’s Followers (5)

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Zelda Popkin


Born
in New York, The United States
July 05, 1898

Died
May 25, 1963

Genre


Zelda Popkin (1898–1983, née Feinberg) was an American author of novels and mystery stories. She created Mary Carner, one of the first professional female private detectives in fiction. Carner was a store detective who appeared in five novels. Connections have been made with Angela Lansbury’s character in the television series Murder, She Wrote — Jessica Fletcher.

Popkin's most successful book was The Journey Home, published in 1945, which sold nearly a million copies. Small Victory, published in 1947, was one of the first American novels with a Holocaust theme, and Quiet Street (1951) was the first American novel about the creation of the state of Israel. She also wrote an autobiography, Open Every Door (1956), chronicling her childhood, li
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Average rating: 3.51 · 120 ratings · 16 reviews · 35 distinct worksSimilar authors
Death Wears a White Gardenia

3.31 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 1938 — 14 editions
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A Death of Innocence

3.47 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 1971 — 9 editions
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Time Off for Murder

3.64 avg rating — 14 ratings — published 1940 — 9 editions
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Quiet Street

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3.67 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2002 — 4 editions
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Murder in the Mist

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 1940 — 6 editions
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The Journey Home

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 1945 — 5 editions
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Dead Man's Gift

3.78 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 1941 — 11 editions
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Dear Once

3.25 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 1977 — 9 editions
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No Crime for a Lady

3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 1941 — 2 editions
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Herman Had Two Daughters

3.67 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2004
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More books by Zelda Popkin…
Death Wears a White Gardenia Time Off for Murder Murder in the Mist Dead Man's Gift No Crime for a Lady
(5 books)
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3.58 avg rating — 64 ratings

Quotes by Zelda Popkin  (?)
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“What he found impossible was to shut off his brain, to detach himself from the intriguing problems with which (he) was involved, or to leave alone the major problems of war and peace, race and poverty, man's inhumanity to man and the persistence of stupidity.”
zelda popkin, A Death of Innocence

“You do not conceive a novel as easily as you conceive a child, nor even half as easily as you create nonfiction work. A journalist amasses facts, anecdotes and interviews with top brass. Enough of these add up to a book. A novelist demands quite different things. He has to find himself in his materials, to know for sure how he would feel and act and the events he writes about. In addition, he requires a catalyst — a person, idea, or emotion which coalesces his ingredients and makes them jell into a solid purpose.”
Zelda Popkin

“The reporters merely gaped. Dumb with awe, they trailed Rorke into a bedroom which was a decorator's dream: smooth wallpaper of softest gray, mauve gauze at the windows, a spread of royal purple velvet on a colossal bed, striking slashes of magenta and chartreuse in upholstery and overdrapes.”
Zelda Popkin, Time Off for Murder

Topics Mentioning This Author

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World Mysteries a...: Are there any female noir writers that I've missed? 43 290 Jun 16, 2015 12:19PM  
Cozy Mysteries : This topic has been closed to new comments. Mystery ABC's, Round 2 12168 1137 Mar 21, 2016 12:30PM