This article needs additional citations for
verification. (November 2009) |
Velda Johnston | |
---|---|
Born | May 31, 1912 Prosperity (near Joplin), Missouri |
Died | January 3, 1997 Palm Desert, CA |
Pen name | Veronica Jason |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1968–1991 |
Genre | Romantic- suspenseGothic Romance |
Velda Johnston (1912–1997) was an American writer of Gothic Romance novels. She also wrote under the pseudonym Veronica Jason. [1] [2] She was raised and educated in Pasadena, California where she sold her first short story as a high school student. She went on to UCLA on a scholarship, where she majored in journalism and wrote articles for the UCLA newspaper. [3][ citation needed]
In the early 1950s, she and her husband, Robert Heslop, moved to New York. There they divided their time between an apartment in Manhattan and a nineteenth-century farmhouse in Sag Harbor on eastern Long Island that was once the home of Samuel Tribie Hildreth Jr., a whaler turned Argonaut of '49. [4] [5]
Johnston's work, both fiction and non-fiction, appeared in scores of magazines in the United States and abroad over a 40-year period. In her writing, she provides examples of young women who seek happiness and fulfillment in an assertive, independent manner. Her early novels were set in the United States, but her later novels usually had foreign settings. [6]
A Howling in the Woods was made into a television movie in 1971 and starred Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman. [7]
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (November 2009) |
Velda Johnston | |
---|---|
Born | May 31, 1912 Prosperity (near Joplin), Missouri |
Died | January 3, 1997 Palm Desert, CA |
Pen name | Veronica Jason |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1968–1991 |
Genre | Romantic- suspenseGothic Romance |
Velda Johnston (1912–1997) was an American writer of Gothic Romance novels. She also wrote under the pseudonym Veronica Jason. [1] [2] She was raised and educated in Pasadena, California where she sold her first short story as a high school student. She went on to UCLA on a scholarship, where she majored in journalism and wrote articles for the UCLA newspaper. [3][ citation needed]
In the early 1950s, she and her husband, Robert Heslop, moved to New York. There they divided their time between an apartment in Manhattan and a nineteenth-century farmhouse in Sag Harbor on eastern Long Island that was once the home of Samuel Tribie Hildreth Jr., a whaler turned Argonaut of '49. [4] [5]
Johnston's work, both fiction and non-fiction, appeared in scores of magazines in the United States and abroad over a 40-year period. In her writing, she provides examples of young women who seek happiness and fulfillment in an assertive, independent manner. Her early novels were set in the United States, but her later novels usually had foreign settings. [6]
A Howling in the Woods was made into a television movie in 1971 and starred Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman. [7]