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Joyce Reason

Joyce Reason (December 1894 – 18 September 1974) was a British author of missionary biographies and historical fiction for young readers.[1][2]

Joyce Reason
BornJoyce Reason
(1894-09-00)September 1894
London, England
Died19 September 1974(1974-09-19) (aged 81)
London, England
OccupationWriter
NationalityEnglish
Alma materMilton Mount College
GenreJunior historical fiction, Missionary biography
Notable worksBran the Bronze Smith, The Mad Miller of Wareham, The Secret Fortress, To Capture the King

Life and works edit

Joyce Reason was born in Canning Town, London. Her father, Will Reason, was a Congregational minister who campaigned and wrote around themes of social justice and poverty (books such as Poverty, Drink and the Community, Homes and Housing, Christianity and Social Renewal). Both her parents were university graduates.[citation needed]

Reason contracted rickets as a child, which left her with a slight limp. In 1900, the Reason family was living in the North London suburb of Friern Barnet.[3] She was educated at Milton Mount College in Gravesend, Kent, an educational institution for the daughters of Congregational ministers, although other pupils could attend.[citation needed]

In a memoir of his great-aunt, Matthew Reason writes: "In following traces of her life, through both public archives and private collections in attics and cupboards, I discovered that as well as a writer she was an idealist, an evangelist, a bluestocking, a spinster, a crank, and a missionary."[4]

She was a keen hiker and her article 'A Lone Woman's Hike from Glastonbury to Winchester' appeared in the first issue of the Hiker and Camper (February 1931).[5] She was considered an authority on the Kibbo Kift movement.[6]Under the woodcraft name of Sea Otter, she was accorded at various times the titles of Skald (storyteller), Folklorist and Nomad Chief of the North. She left the movement in the 1930s due to its politicisation to begin a new career as a writer.[7]

Reason was a prolific author of popular missionary biographies and accounts of the work of the London Missionary Society. She wrote missionary biographies of Mary Aldersey of China,[8] James Chalmers of Papua,[9]Albert Cook of Uganda,[10][11][12]William Kendall Gale of Madagascar,[13] Wilfred Grenfell of Labrador,[14] James Hannington of Uganda,[15] Griffith John of China,[16] David Jones of Madagascar,[17] Liang Fa of China,[18] Henry Nott of the South Seas,[19] Ruatoka of Papua,[20] Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand,[21] Howard Somervell of India,[22] and others.[23] She also wrote popular biographies of John Bunyan,[24] Robert Browne,[25] Henry Barrowe,[26] William Penn,[27] Isobel Kuhn[28] and Sadhu Sundar Singh of India.[29]

In September 1951, Joyce Reason joined the headquarters staff of the Leprosy Mission as Editorial Secretary for a five-year term.[30] She visited Uganda and Tanganyika to write an account of the Mission's work in East Africa, and also visited the Church of Scotland's leprosy settlement at Chogoria in Kenya.[31]

Joyce Reason was a noted advocate of Christian books and in 1950 was a featured speaker at the Christianity in Books Exhibition at Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, together with the Dean of St Paul's Cathedral.[32] She believed there was empirical evidence for the existence of the human soul. In response to a letter by a Professor Crew about life-termination by the individual, she suggested that the professor had not investigated evidence from ESP and psychology for regarding our lives as a part of something "much larger and more enduring".[33]

Reason was noted as an author of historical fiction for young people.[34] Reviewers praised her books for their well-researched historical backgrounds, strong stories and colourful personalities. Her novel The Mad Miller of Wareham is set in King John's time in Dorset and concerns a plot to put Arthur of Brittany on the throne.[35] The towns, villages, abbeys and priories of Dorset, where the tale is set, are creditably brought to light and more than one of the characters is drawn in the round and exists as a person.[36] The novel To Capture the King, concerns a Jacobite plot and smuggling on the Sussex coast, with incidental glimpses of Samuel Johnson and Horace Walpole.The texture of history is less closely woven in this but the story is exciting.[37][38]

Bran the Bronze-Smith: A Tale of the Bronze Age in the British Isles[39] is a story a boy in prehistoric Britain who becomes a travelling smith and eventually a master smith.[40][41][42] Swords of Iron is set in Pre-Roman Britain.[43] The Secret Fortress deals in traditional style with the last age of Viking rule in Cumberland.[44] The Queen's Champions is a story of a plot against Queen Elizabeth I and how a young boy plays an important part in averting disaster.[45] Red Pennons Flying is a tale set during the Hundred Years' War.

She also wrote Dwifa's Curse: A Tale of the Stone Age under the nom-de-plume "Blue Wolf".[1] It is set in Stone Age Britain, just at the time the earlier Neolithic people are coming into contact with later Stone Age people armed with the bow and more advanced in civilisation.[46][47]

She produced a number of works for the Sunday School "rewards" market which are still occasionally reprinted.[48] The copyrights of these and many of her other works are now held by Lutterworth Press.[citation needed]

For the last 20 years of her life at least, Joyce Reason, a Congregationalist by denomination, lived at 102 Addison Rd, Guildford. She was not married and for much of her life lived with her younger sister, the chemist and teacher Hazel Alden Reason, who was also unmarried.[citation needed]

A number of her books have been translated into French, German and Swedish.[citation needed]

Selected juvenile fiction edit

  • Bran the Bronze-Smith. Illustrated by the author. (1930, repr.1939,1961)
  • Prentices and Clubs! A Tudor Tale. (1947)
  • The Secret Fortress. (1949)
  • Swords of Iron. (1956)
  • The Mad Miller of Wareham. Illustrated by S. Van Abbé. (1949, repr.1954)
  • The Queen's Champions. Illustrated by Trevor Stubley. (1966)
  • To Capture the King: The Story of a Jacobite Plot. (1956)

References edit

  1. ^ a b Who Was Who Among English and European Authors, 1931-1949, Vol. 3, Gale Research Co., Detroit, 1978, p.1177
  2. ^ Matthew Reason, "Archive, Empathy, Memory: The Resurrection of Joyce Reason". Memory Connection, Vol.2, No.1, 2016,Matthew-Reason.pdf
  3. ^ Matthew Reason op.cit
  4. ^ Matthew Reason op.cit
  5. ^ Adam Stout,Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in Pre-war Britain. Blackwell Publishing, 2008, pp.185-6 ISBN 978-1-4051-5504-5 [1]
  6. ^ Manchester Guardian, 17 December 1927. Notice of address by Miss Joyce Reason, "What is this Kibbo Kift?"
  7. ^ Matthew Reason op.cit
  8. ^ Joyce Reason, The Witch of Ningpo: Mary Aldersey. Eagle books, 1940.
  9. ^ Joyce Reason, Tales from Chalmers: Stories Based on the Autobiography of James Chalmers, Missionary in Papua. London: Livingstone Press, 1942.
  10. ^ Joyce Reason, Safety Last: The Story of Albert Cook of Uganda. London: Highway Press, 1954.
  11. ^ George Craig. Shorter Notices: Review of Safety Last: The Story of Albert Cook of Uganda. In: Oxford Journals, African Affairs, 1955, p242 [2]
  12. ^ Cited in: Gerald H. Anderson. Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1999 ISBN 978-0-8028-4680-8
  13. ^ Joyce Reason, Go and Find It!:[William Kendall Gale of Madagascar. London: Edinburgh House Press, 1942
  14. ^ Joyce Reason, Deep-Sea Doctor: Wilfred Grenfell. London: Edinburgh House Press, 1941
  15. ^ Joyce Reason, Bishop Jim: The Story of James Hannington. Lutterworth Press, 1955
  16. ^ Joyce Reason, Griffith John of China: A Biography. Eagle Books, London, 1950
  17. ^ Joyce Reason, Storm over Madagascar: David Jones. London: Edinburgh House, 1957
  18. ^ Joyce Reason, Bold Smuggler: Liang A-Fa of China, London, Edinburgh House Press, 1960
  19. ^ Joyce Reason, The Bricklayer and the King: Henry Nott of the South Seas. Eagle Books, London, 1938.
  20. ^ Joyce Reason, Take My Life: Ruatoka of Papua. London: Edinburgh House Press, 1947.
  21. ^ Joyce Reason, No Road for his Coach: Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand. Eagle Books, London, 1961.
  22. ^ Joyce Reason, Heights After Everest: Howard Somervell of India. London: Edinburgh House Press, 1954.
  23. ^ See for example: Cecil Northcott and Joyce Reason. Six Missionaries in Africa: Robert Moffat, David Livingstone, James Stewart, Alexander Mackay, Mary Slessor, Albert Cook. London: Oxford University Press, 1947
  24. ^ Joyce Reason, To be a Pilgrim: The Story of John Bunyan. Lutterworth Press, 1961
  25. ^ Joyce Reason, Henry Barrowe (1550-1593) and John Greenwood ( -1593:). Independent Press, 1961
  26. ^ ditto
  27. ^ Joyce Reason, Quaker Cavalier: The Story of William Penn. Lutterworth Press, 1965.
  28. ^ Joyce Reason, Searcher for God: The story of Isobel Kuhn. Lutterworth Press, 1963
  29. ^ Joyce Reason, The Man who Disappeared: Sundar Singh of India. London: Edinburgh House Press, 1937
  30. ^ Leprosy Mission, This Spreading Tree: The Story of the Leprosy Mission from 1918 to 1970. Leprosy Mission, London, 1974.
  31. ^ Joyce Reason, Laughter of the Desert. Illustrated by L.F. Lupton. Mission to Lepers, London, 1952
  32. ^ The Times, 11 October 1950, p.7
  33. ^ Manchester Guardian, 8 November 1968
  34. ^ Kenneth Charlton, Recent Historical Fiction for Secondary School Children. London: Historical Association, 1969
  35. ^ School Librarian and School Library Review, Vol.7, School Library Association, 1954. pp.21,144
  36. ^ Mary Crozier, "Back to Earth". Manchester Guardian, 9 April 1954, p.11.
  37. ^ Mary Crozier, "Archery to Art History". Manchester Guardian, 23 March 1956, p18.
  38. ^ The American Journal of Education, Vol.88, 1979-1996, p.371
  39. ^ Joyce Reason (1932). Bran the Bronze-smith: A Tale of the Bronze Age in the British Isles. E.P. Dutton & Company, Incorporated. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  40. ^ Boy Scouts of America, Inc. (December 1932). Boys' Life. Boy Scouts of America, Inc. pp. 41–. ISSN 0006-8608. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  41. ^ Agatha L. Shea, "Thrilling Book has its Setting in Bronze Age". Chicago Daily Tribune, 20 Aug 1932
  42. ^ Hannah J. Logasa, Historical Fiction and other Reading References for History Classes in Junior and Senior High Schools, The University of Chicago High School. [3]
  43. ^ Geoffrey Trease, Tales out of School, Heinemann Educational Books, 1964, p.104 ISBN 978-0-435-80900-3
  44. ^ Marcus Crouch. The Nesbit Tradition: The Children's Novel 1972 1945-1970, London: Benn, 1972. p.59 ISBN 0-510-31351-5
  45. ^ School Librarian and School Library Review, Vol.15, School Library Association, 1967. p.60
  46. ^ The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art, Vol. 133, J.W. Parker and Son, 1922, p.154
  47. ^ Dwifa's Curse (plot summary)
  48. ^ Principally: Three Secret Seeds (1964), The Fire Escape (1965), Mrs Townsend and a Puppy (1967), Jim All Alone (1969), Josephine Jane (1970), and The Black and White Twins (1970).

External links edit

  • WorldCat Identities: Joyce Reason

joyce, reason, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2023, learn,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Joyce Reason news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Joyce Reason December 1894 18 September 1974 was a British author of missionary biographies and historical fiction for young readers 1 2 Joyce ReasonBornJoyce Reason 1894 09 00 September 1894London EnglandDied19 September 1974 1974 09 19 aged 81 London EnglandOccupationWriterNationalityEnglishAlma materMilton Mount CollegeGenreJunior historical fiction Missionary biographyNotable worksBran the Bronze Smith The Mad Miller of Wareham The Secret Fortress To Capture the King Contents 1 Life and works 2 Selected juvenile fiction 3 References 4 External linksLife and works editJoyce Reason was born in Canning Town London Her father Will Reason was a Congregational minister who campaigned and wrote around themes of social justice and poverty books such as Poverty Drink and the Community Homes and Housing Christianity and Social Renewal Both her parents were university graduates citation needed Reason contracted rickets as a child which left her with a slight limp In 1900 the Reason family was living in the North London suburb of Friern Barnet 3 She was educated at Milton Mount College in Gravesend Kent an educational institution for the daughters of Congregational ministers although other pupils could attend citation needed In a memoir of his great aunt Matthew Reason writes In following traces of her life through both public archives and private collections in attics and cupboards I discovered that as well as a writer she was an idealist an evangelist a bluestocking a spinster a crank and a missionary 4 She was a keen hiker and her article A Lone Woman s Hike from Glastonbury to Winchester appeared in the first issue of the Hiker and Camper February 1931 5 She was considered an authority on the Kibbo Kift movement 6 Under the woodcraft name of Sea Otter she was accorded at various times the titles of Skald storyteller Folklorist and Nomad Chief of the North She left the movement in the 1930s due to its politicisation to begin a new career as a writer 7 Reason was a prolific author of popular missionary biographies and accounts of the work of the London Missionary Society She wrote missionary biographies of Mary Aldersey of China 8 James Chalmers of Papua 9 Albert Cook of Uganda 10 11 12 William Kendall Gale of Madagascar 13 Wilfred Grenfell of Labrador 14 James Hannington of Uganda 15 Griffith John of China 16 David Jones of Madagascar 17 Liang Fa of China 18 Henry Nott of the South Seas 19 Ruatoka of Papua 20 Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand 21 Howard Somervell of India 22 and others 23 She also wrote popular biographies of John Bunyan 24 Robert Browne 25 Henry Barrowe 26 William Penn 27 Isobel Kuhn 28 and Sadhu Sundar Singh of India 29 In September 1951 Joyce Reason joined the headquarters staff of the Leprosy Mission as Editorial Secretary for a five year term 30 She visited Uganda and Tanganyika to write an account of the Mission s work in East Africa and also visited the Church of Scotland s leprosy settlement at Chogoria in Kenya 31 Joyce Reason was a noted advocate of Christian books and in 1950 was a featured speaker at the Christianity in Books Exhibition at Memorial Hall Farringdon Street together with the Dean of St Paul s Cathedral 32 She believed there was empirical evidence for the existence of the human soul In response to a letter by a Professor Crew about life termination by the individual she suggested that the professor had not investigated evidence from ESP and psychology for regarding our lives as a part of something much larger and more enduring 33 Reason was noted as an author of historical fiction for young people 34 Reviewers praised her books for their well researched historical backgrounds strong stories and colourful personalities Her novel The Mad Miller of Wareham is set in King John s time in Dorset and concerns a plot to put Arthur of Brittany on the throne 35 The towns villages abbeys and priories of Dorset where the tale is set are creditably brought to light and more than one of the characters is drawn in the round and exists as a person 36 The novel To Capture the King concerns a Jacobite plot and smuggling on the Sussex coast with incidental glimpses of Samuel Johnson and Horace Walpole The texture of history is less closely woven in this but the story is exciting 37 38 Bran the Bronze Smith A Tale of the Bronze Age in the British Isles 39 is a story a boy in prehistoric Britain who becomes a travelling smith and eventually a master smith 40 41 42 Swords of Iron is set in Pre Roman Britain 43 The Secret Fortress deals in traditional style with the last age of Viking rule in Cumberland 44 The Queen s Champions is a story of a plot against Queen Elizabeth I and how a young boy plays an important part in averting disaster 45 Red Pennons Flying is a tale set during the Hundred Years War She also wrote Dwifa s Curse A Tale of the Stone Age under the nom de plume Blue Wolf 1 It is set in Stone Age Britain just at the time the earlier Neolithic people are coming into contact with later Stone Age people armed with the bow and more advanced in civilisation 46 47 She produced a number of works for the Sunday School rewards market which are still occasionally reprinted 48 The copyrights of these and many of her other works are now held by Lutterworth Press citation needed For the last 20 years of her life at least Joyce Reason a Congregationalist by denomination lived at 102 Addison Rd Guildford She was not married and for much of her life lived with her younger sister the chemist and teacher Hazel Alden Reason who was also unmarried citation needed A number of her books have been translated into French German and Swedish citation needed Selected juvenile fiction editBran the Bronze Smith Illustrated by the author 1930 repr 1939 1961 Prentices and Clubs A Tudor Tale 1947 The Secret Fortress 1949 Swords of Iron 1956 The Mad Miller of Wareham Illustrated by S Van Abbe 1949 repr 1954 The Queen s Champions Illustrated by Trevor Stubley 1966 To Capture the King The Story of a Jacobite Plot 1956 References edit a b Who Was Who Among English and European Authors 1931 1949 Vol 3 Gale Research Co Detroit 1978 p 1177 Matthew Reason Archive Empathy Memory The Resurrection of Joyce Reason Memory Connection Vol 2 No 1 2016 Matthew Reason pdf Matthew Reason op cit Matthew Reason op cit Adam Stout Creating Prehistory Druids Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in Pre war Britain Blackwell Publishing 2008 pp 185 6 ISBN 978 1 4051 5504 5 1 Manchester Guardian 17 December 1927 Notice of address by Miss Joyce Reason What is this Kibbo Kift Matthew Reason op cit Joyce Reason The Witch of Ningpo Mary Aldersey Eagle books 1940 Joyce Reason Tales from Chalmers Stories Based on the Autobiography of James Chalmers Missionary in Papua London Livingstone Press 1942 Joyce Reason Safety Last The Story of Albert Cook of Uganda London Highway Press 1954 George Craig Shorter Notices Review of Safety Last The Story of Albert Cook of Uganda In Oxford Journals African Affairs 1955 p242 2 Cited in Gerald H Anderson Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1999 ISBN 978 0 8028 4680 8 Joyce Reason Go and Find It William Kendall Gale of Madagascar London Edinburgh House Press 1942 Joyce Reason Deep Sea Doctor Wilfred Grenfell London Edinburgh House Press 1941 Joyce Reason Bishop Jim The Story of James Hannington Lutterworth Press 1955 Joyce Reason Griffith John of China A Biography Eagle Books London 1950 Joyce Reason Storm over Madagascar David Jones London Edinburgh House 1957 Joyce Reason Bold Smuggler Liang A Fa of China London Edinburgh House Press 1960 Joyce Reason The Bricklayer and the King Henry Nott of the South Seas Eagle Books London 1938 Joyce Reason Take My Life Ruatoka of Papua London Edinburgh House Press 1947 Joyce Reason No Road for his Coach Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand Eagle Books London 1961 Joyce Reason Heights After Everest Howard Somervell of India London Edinburgh House Press 1954 See for example Cecil Northcott and Joyce Reason Six Missionaries in Africa Robert Moffat David Livingstone James Stewart Alexander Mackay Mary Slessor Albert Cook London Oxford University Press 1947 Joyce Reason To be a Pilgrim The Story of John Bunyan Lutterworth Press 1961 Joyce Reason Henry Barrowe 1550 1593 and John Greenwood 1593 Independent Press 1961 ditto Joyce Reason Quaker Cavalier The Story of William Penn Lutterworth Press 1965 Joyce Reason Searcher for God The story of Isobel Kuhn Lutterworth Press 1963 Joyce Reason The Man who Disappeared Sundar Singh of India London Edinburgh House Press 1937 Leprosy Mission This Spreading Tree The Story of the Leprosy Mission from 1918 to 1970 Leprosy Mission London 1974 Joyce Reason Laughter of the Desert Illustrated by L F Lupton Mission to Lepers London 1952 The Times 11 October 1950 p 7 Manchester Guardian 8 November 1968 Kenneth Charlton Recent Historical Fiction for Secondary School Children London Historical Association 1969 School Librarian and School Library Review Vol 7 School Library Association 1954 pp 21 144 Mary Crozier Back to Earth Manchester Guardian 9 April 1954 p 11 Mary Crozier Archery to Art History Manchester Guardian 23 March 1956 p18 The American Journal of Education Vol 88 1979 1996 p 371 Joyce Reason 1932 Bran the Bronze smith A Tale of the Bronze Age in the British Isles E P Dutton amp Company Incorporated Retrieved 10 April 2013 Boy Scouts of America Inc December 1932 Boys Life Boy Scouts of America Inc pp 41 ISSN 0006 8608 Retrieved 10 April 2013 Agatha L Shea Thrilling Book has its Setting in Bronze Age Chicago Daily Tribune 20 Aug 1932 Hannah J Logasa Historical Fiction and other Reading References for History Classes in Junior and Senior High Schools The University of Chicago High School 3 Geoffrey Trease Tales out of School Heinemann Educational Books 1964 p 104 ISBN 978 0 435 80900 3 Marcus Crouch The Nesbit Tradition The Children s Novel 1972 1945 1970 London Benn 1972 p 59 ISBN 0 510 31351 5 School Librarian and School Library Review Vol 15 School Library Association 1967 p 60 The Saturday Review of Politics Literature Science and Art Vol 133 J W Parker and Son 1922 p 154 Dwifa s Curse plot summary Principally Three Secret Seeds 1964 The Fire Escape 1965 Mrs Townsend and a Puppy 1967 Jim All Alone 1969 Josephine Jane 1970 and The Black and White Twins 1970 External links editWorldCat Identities Joyce Reason Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joyce Reason amp oldid 1193318064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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