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Mazo de la Roche

Mazo de la Roche (/də lə ˈrɒʃ/; born Maisie Louise Roche; January 15, 1879 – July 12, 1961) was a Canadian writer who was the author of the Jalna novels, one of the most popular series of books of her time.

Mazo de la Roche
Mazo de la Roche, December 18, 1927
Born
Maisie Roche

(1879-01-15)January 15, 1879
DiedJuly 12, 1961(1961-07-12) (aged 82)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
PartnerCaroline Clement
Parents
  • William Richmond Roche
  • Alberta Louise Lundy

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Mazo de la Roche, in Clarkson 1928

De la Roche was born in Newmarket, Ontario, north of Toronto, on January 15, 1879.[1][2] She was the only child of William Roche, a salesman, and Alberta (Lundy) Roche, who was a great-great-niece of David Willson, founder of the Children of Peace, through the latter's elder half-brother Hugh L. Willson.[3] On her father's side of the family, her uncle Francis signed himself as "Francis J. de la Roche", claiming a descendancy from Sir Richard de la Roche (1199-1283) of Strongbow's army;[4] Mazo eventually adopted the "de la Roche" surname, claiming that it was a nod to French heritage.[1][5][6]

The Roche family moved frequently throughout Southern Ontario during her childhood because of her mother's ill health and her father's work as a travelling salesman.[1] She lived successively in Newmarket (1879–85), at least two separate addresses in Toronto (1885–88), several dwellings in Orillia (1888–91), Galt (1891-92), Orillia (again, 1892–94) and Toronto (again, 1894-1900).[7][4] She was a lonely child who became an avid reader and developed her own fictional world, "The Play," in which she created imaginary scenes and characters. One of the family's moves meant some years on a farm owned by a wealthy man who farmed as a hobby. There de la Roche began to develop her fictional world of rural aristocracy that would—years later—become Jalna.

When de la Roche was seven, her parents adopted her orphaned eight-year-old cousin Caroline Clement, who joined in Mazo's fantasy world game and would become her lifelong companion. De la Roche wrote her first short story at age 9. She attended high school at Jameson Collegiate (now Parkdale Collegiate Institute) in west end Toronto, and later studied at the Metropolitan School of Music, the University of Toronto, and the Ontario School of Art, all in Toronto.[7]

Early writing career edit

De la Roche, then 23, had her first story published in 1902 in Munsey's Magazine, but very shortly thereafter (in February 1903) she suffered a mental breakdown. For the next several years, she suffered from depression and insomnia, and did not write.

In 1905, Roche and Caroline moved with Mazo's parents to Acton, Ontario to operate the Acton House hotel.[8] She was known locally as "Maisie Roach",[9] and lived there until 1908, selling one of her stories while she was there.[10] Her novel Delight was based on her time there,[8] and Acton's geography figures notably in Possession.[9] A few years later in 1911, by now in her early thirties, de la Roche moved with Caroline and the Roches to Sovereign House in Bronte, Ontario, to try life as farm owners. By now, de la Roche had resumed writing and was placing stories in American magazines on an occasional basis.

William Roche, Mazo's father, died in 1915[11] of cirrhosis of the liver brought on by alcoholism. de la Roche, her mother Alberta and Caroline moved back to Toronto.

De la Roche continued to write, but at this juncture Caroline Clement was the main breadwinner of the household, working as a civil service clerk. (She would eventually rise to become the province of Ontario's chief statistician.) During the summers, Clement lived in a Toronto boarding house while de la Roche and her mother would stay in a cottage near Lake Simcoe, several hours north of the city.

Alberta Roche died in 1920. After this, de la Roche's writing career began in earnest, and Clement and de la Roche were never again separated for any significant length of time. During most of the 1920s, they split their time between Toronto and a cottage they had built in Clarkson, Ontario.

Her first published book, Explorers of the Dawn, appeared in 1922, and was a fix-up of some previously published sketches, vignettes and stories rewritten to work within an overarching narrative framework. Her first two proper novels, Possession (1923) and Delight (1926), were romantic novels which were mild successes, but nevertheless earned her little in income or recognition. De la Roche also wrote plays and short stories through this period.

Her third novel, Jalna, was submitted to the American magazine Atlantic Monthly, winning a $10,000 award. Its victory and subsequent publication in 1927 brought de la Roche fame and fortune at the age of 48.

 
Benares Historic House and Bianca de la Roche. Mazo De La Roche & Caroline Clement, ca. 1930s

Jalna series edit

Jalna was an immediate sensation, with the public demanding sequels and prequels for the rest of de la Roche's life. Though she would continue to write other works, the series known as the Jalna series or the Whiteoak Chronicles would dominate the rest of her writing career. The series tells the story of one hundred years of the Whiteoak family covering from 1854 to 1954. The 16 "Jalna" novels were not written in sequential order, however, and each can be read as an independent story.

There are similarities and differences in the experiences of the Whiteoak family and that of de la Roche. While the lives and successes of the Whiteoaks rise and fall, there remained for them the steadiness of the family manor, known as Jalna. de la Roche's family endured the illness of her mother, the perpetual job searches of her father, and the adoption of her orphaned cousin while being moved 17 times. Several critics believe that Finch Whiteoak who majors in Finch's Fortune (1932) is a reflection of de la Roche herself. He was a somewhat tortured concert pianist with overtones of gayness.[12] The names of many of the characters were taken from gravestones in a Newmarket, Ontario cemetery.

Bestselling author edit

The sudden bout of fame was not an immediate blessing for de la Roche, as the stress of the attendant publicity caused her to experience another breakdown in early 1928.[13] She eventually recovered, and began writing a sequel to Jalna, which was published in 1929.

The income from Jalna and its sequels allowed de la Roche to become the main breadwinner of the household, after years of having been supported by Clement. The two would make an extended trip to Europe beginning in 1929, living first in Italy, then in the United Kingdom. In 1931 they adopted the two orphaned children of friends of theirs.[14] This was extremely unusual for the time, as adoptions by single women were technically not allowed in the UK during this era; the machinations by which de la Roche and Clement were able to do this are unknown.

The family returned to Toronto for a time in 1934-35, heading back to England again in 1936 before returning to Toronto for good in 1939. She purchased a home at 3590 Bayview Avenue the same year, eventually adding two wings to what would become a 17-room mansion.[5] Originally built in 1922, de la Roche lived in the home until 1945 when she and her family relocated to Forest Hill where it was easier to secure staff and get the children to and from school.[5][6] During this era, de la Roche reliably published at least one book a year, sometimes more. However, although her early work had received positive critical notices, critical reaction to her newer works was often decidedly cool, in both North America and Europe.[4] Nevertheless, the Jalna books were still strong sellers, with a wide and appreciative readership.

De la Roche's productivity slowed somewhat once she was in her sixties and seventies. Partly due to arthritis in her hands, much of her later work was dictated to Clement. She still published regularly right up to her death, with her final novel Morning at Jalna appearing in 1960 when she was 81.

Mazo and Caroline Clement edit

Overall, de la Roche and Caroline Clement lived a fairly reclusive life, and their relationship was not discussed widely in the press. In her infrequent interviews, de la Roche often expressed a need for privacy. Though there has been much speculation – without evidence – in recent years as to the exact nature of the relationship between de la Roche and Clement, de la Roche's autobiography makes no mention of them being anything other than close companions.

Not long after de la Roche's death in 1961, in accordance with her wishes, Clement burned almost all of the author's personal diaries. Clement died in 1972.

Most recently, de la Roche was the subject of a Red Queen Productions and National Film Board of Canada co-production, The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche, which premiered on March 17, 2012 at the Festival international du film sur l'art in Montreal, then had its Toronto premiere at Hot Docs, April 29, 2012. The film is directed by Maya Gallus, produced by Justine Pimlott and Anita Lee, and combines archival material with dramatic reenactments featuring Severn Thompson as Mazo de la Roche.[15] The film "lend(s) credence to the theory that its subject was a closeted lesbian",[16] although several people in the film who knew de la Roche and Clement, including their adopted daughter Esmée, state on-camera that they believe the relationship between the two was close but ultimately platonic.

Death and legacy edit

De la Roche died on July 12, 1961.[1] She was buried at the St. George's Anglican Church cemetery, at Sibbald Point, near Sutton, Ontario.[1] Her grave site is located near Canadian writer Stephen Leacock.[1] Later, Caroline Clement was buried alongside her.

 
December, 1927

The Jalna series has sold more than eleven million copies in 193 English and 92 foreign editions. In 1935, the film Jalna, based on the novel, was released by RKO Radio Pictures and, in 1972, a CBC television series was produced based on the series, which actually used the historic Benares house as the principal filming location. This century-old Georgian revival home which is situated in Clarkson, Ontario, is believed to be the inspiration for Jalna, hence the reason for the name of this of this subdivision when the original large Benares estate was severed and sold off to residential developers in the late 1960s.[17] (Benares and Jalna are in fact both names of Indian cities.) It is now maintained by the Museums of Mississauga.[18] A nearby park is named Whiteoaks in honour of the series, as is a nearby elementary school. Streets in the area also bear names such as "Mazo Crescent," "Jalna Avenue," "Roche Court," and "Whiteoaks Avenue."

Her house at 3590 Bayview Avenue in Toronto, Ontario was bought by The Zoroastrian Society of Ontario in 1978 and continues to serve as the society's community centre (as of February 2021).[5][6][19] It is listed as a City of Toronto Heritage Property.[20][6]

In the 1970s, a land developer in London, Ontario used the characters from de la Roche's Jalna series to name streets for a new subdivision named White Oaks. Street names used from the Jalna series include: Jalna Boulevard, Ernest Avenue, Renny Crescent, Finch Crescent, Nicholas Crescent, Alayne Crescent, Archer Crescent, Piers Crescent, Meg Drive.[21]

In 1990, a French-immersion public school in de la Roche's birthplace of Newmarket, Ontario was named in her honour.[22]

Responding to an enquiry on the pronunciation of her name, her secretary told The Literary Digest: "Her Christian name is pronounced may'zo, and Roche is pronounced rosh, to rhyme with Foch."[23]

Works edit

Novels edit

The following table can be sorted to show Mazo de la Roche's novels in chronological order,
or arranged alphabetically by title, by publisher, or by series.
Year Title Publisher Series (Order) Notes
1922 Explorers of the Dawn Knopf
1923 Possession Macmillan Reprinted, C. Chivers, 1973.
1926 Delight Macmillan Reprinted with introduction by Desmond Pacey, McClelland and Stewart, 1961
1927 Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 7 ISBN 0-316-18000-9
1929 Whiteoaks of Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 8 Also published as Whiteoaks, Macmillan, 1929; ISBN 0-316-18014-9
1930 Portrait of a Dog Little, Brown Immortalizes the author's beloved Scottish Terrier
1932 Finch's Fortune Little, Brown Jalna 9 ISBN 0-333-09966-4
1932 Lark Ascending Little, Brown
1932 The Thunder of the New Wings Little, Brown
1933 The Master of Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 10 ISBN 0-316-18002-5
1934 Beside a Norman Tower Little, Brown
1935 Young Renny Little, Brown Jalna 4 ISBN 0-333-01371-9
1936 Whiteoak Harvest Little, Brown Jalna 11 ISBN 0-333-07404-1
1937 The Very Little House Little, Brown
1938 Growth of a Man Little, Brown
1940 Whiteoak Heritage Little, Brown Jalna 5 ISBN 0-333-05090-8
1941 Wakefield's Course Little, Brown Jalna 12 ISBN 0-316-18010-6
1942 The Two Saplings Macmillan
1944 Building of Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 1 ISBN 0-316-17996-5
1946 Return to Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 13 ISBN 0-333-04842-3
1949 Mary Wakefield Little, Brown Jalna 3 ISBN 0-333-07652-4
1951 Renny's Daughter Little, Brown Jalna 14 ISBN 0-333-08561-2
1953 Whiteoak Brothers Little, Brown Jalna 6 ISBN 0-333-08809-3
1954 Variable Winds at Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 15 ISBN 0-333-02280-7
1955 The Song of Lambert Macmillan Juvenile
1958 Centenary at Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 16 ISBN 0-316-17997-3
1958 Bill and Coo Macmillan Juvenile
1960 Morning at Jalna Little, Brown Jalna 2 ISBN 0-333-03933-5

Plays edit

  • Low Life: A Comedy in One Act (first produced as Low Life in Toronto, Ontario, at Trinity Memorial Hall, May 14, 1925), Macmillan, 1925.
  • Come True (first produced in Toronto at Trinity Memorial Hall, May 16, 1927), Macmillan, 1927.
  • The Return of the Emigrant (first produced in Toronto at Trinity Memorial Hall, March 12, 1928.) Collected in Low Life and Other Plays (contains Low Life, Come True, and The Return of the Emigrant), Little, Brown, 1929. ISBN 1-131-68067-7
  • (With Nancy Price) Whiteoaks: A Play (adapted from Whiteoaks of Jalna; first produced in London, England, at Little Theatre in the Adelphi, April 13, 1936; produced on Broadway, 1938), Macmillan, 1936. ISBN 0-333-06247-7
 
Bain News Service/LOC ggbain.24645. Mazo De La Roche
  • Mistress of Jalna, first produced in Bromley, Kent, England, at New Theatre, November 12, 1951.

Short story collections edit

  • The Sacred Bullock and Other Stories of Animals, Little, Brown, 1939. ISBN 0-8369-3186-6
  • A Boy in the House, and Other Stories, Little, Brown, 1952.
  • Selected Stories of Mazo de la Roche, edited and introduced by Douglas Daymond, University of Ottawa Press, 1979. ISBN 2-7603-4340-5

Non-fiction edit

  • Quebec: Historic Seaport (non-fiction), Doubleday, 1944. ISBN 1-121-26423-9
  • Ringing the Changes: An Autobiography, Little, Brown, 1957. ISBN 1-141-37942-2
  • (Author of introduction) George F. Nelson, editor, Northern Lights: A New Collection of Distinguished Writing by Canadian Authors, Doubleday, 1960. OCLC 1395116, LCCN 60-9741.

Related works edit

  • Jalna 1935 film based on the novel. IMDb
  • The Whiteoaks of Jalna 1972 CBC TV series based on the Jalna series. IMDb

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Crowe-Grande, Trish (9 August 2020). "Exploring the early years of Newmarket literary icon Mazo de la Roche". NewmarketToday.ca. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  2. ^ "Mazo de la Roche". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  3. ^ (PDF). www.sharontemple.ca. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 11, 2013. Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c de la Roche, Mazo (1957). Ringing the Changes. Dundurn Press. ISBN 9781459736177.
  5. ^ a b c d "The Home of Mazo de la Roche, 3950 Bayview Avenue". North York Historical Society. March 2018. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Goldenberg, Susan (28 December 2019). "Opinion : Bestselling author Mazo de la Roche called North York home for 6 years". Toronto.com. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  7. ^ a b "Mazo de la Roche". Simon Fraser University. 2014.
  8. ^ a b Coles, Hartley (January 8, 1997). "Why the omission?". Acton Tanner. p. 6.
  9. ^ a b Coles, Hartley (July 19, 2007). "Acton knew her as plain Maisie Roach; worldwide she was Mazo de la Roche". New Tanner. Acton.
  10. ^ "Mazo de la Roche Here a Year; Father Ran Main St. Hotel". The Acton Free Press. July 20, 1961. p. 1.
  11. ^ "Died: Roche". The Acton Free Press. July 8, 1915. p. 2.
  12. ^ p. 37, Not in Front of the Audience by Nicholas de Jongh
  13. ^ Plummer, Kevin (June 28, 2014). "Historicist: Revealing Fictions". Torontoist.
  14. ^ . AndrejKoymasky.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  15. ^ Weldon, Carolyne (16 March 2012). "Feature film on Canada's most famous unknown author premieres at FIFA". NFB.ca Blog. National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  16. ^ Carrington, Julian (April 23, 2012). "The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche". Torontoist.
  17. ^ Benares Historic House
  18. ^ Museums of Mississauga
  19. ^ "Zoroastrian Society of Ontario - About us". www.zso.org. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.
  21. ^ "Google Map of White Oaks".
  22. ^ "Mazo de la Roche P.S." York Region District School Board. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  23. ^ Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.

Further reading edit

  • Petri Liukkonen. "Mazo de la Roche". Books and Writers.
  • Virginia Careless Mazo De La Roche: Mistress of Jalna 1879-1961. Retrieved June 23, 2005. at the Wayback Machine (archived June 3, 2006)
  • Mazo de la Roche Public School (2004). . Retrieved June 23, 2005.
  • The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition (2004). . Retrieved June 23, 2005.
  • Ontario Museum Association (2005). Benares Historic House. Retrieved June 23, 2005.
  • James H. Marsh, ed. (1990). The Junior Encyclopedia of Canada. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers Ltd.. ISBN 0-88830-334-3.
  • Ellie Friedman & Joyce Y. Carter (1995). The Jalna Series; or, The Whiteoak Chronicles by Mazo de la Roche. Retrieved June 26, 2005.
  • "Biography - de la Roche, Mazo (1879-1961)" (2004). Contemporary Authors. Thomson Gale.
  • D. M. Daymond (1976). "Nature, Culture and Love: Mazo De La Roche's Explorers of the Dawn and The Thunder of New Wings". Studies in Canadian Literature, 1.2.
  • Joan Doig (1980). "Mazo de la Roche's Delight: An Unexpected Source". Studies in Canadian Literature, 5.2.

External links edit

Electronic editions edit

mazo, roche, born, maisie, louise, roche, january, 1879, july, 1961, canadian, writer, author, jalna, novels, most, popular, series, books, time, december, 1927bornmaisie, roche, 1879, january, 1879newmarket, ontario, canadadiedjuly, 1961, 1961, aged, toronto,. Mazo de la Roche d e l e ˈ r ɒ ʃ born Maisie Louise Roche January 15 1879 July 12 1961 was a Canadian writer who was the author of the Jalna novels one of the most popular series of books of her time Mazo de la RocheMazo de la Roche December 18 1927BornMaisie Roche 1879 01 15 January 15 1879Newmarket Ontario CanadaDiedJuly 12 1961 1961 07 12 aged 82 Toronto Ontario CanadaNationalityCanadianPartnerCaroline ClementParentsWilliam Richmond Roche Alberta Louise Lundy Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early writing career 1 3 Jalna series 1 4 Bestselling author 1 5 Mazo and Caroline Clement 1 6 Death and legacy 2 Works 2 1 Novels 2 2 Plays 2 3 Short story collections 2 4 Non fiction 2 5 Related works 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Further reading 5 External links 5 1 Electronic editionsBiography editEarly life edit nbsp Mazo de la Roche in Clarkson 1928 De la Roche was born in Newmarket Ontario north of Toronto on January 15 1879 1 2 She was the only child of William Roche a salesman and Alberta Lundy Roche who was a great great niece of David Willson founder of the Children of Peace through the latter s elder half brother Hugh L Willson 3 On her father s side of the family her uncle Francis signed himself as Francis J de la Roche claiming a descendancy from Sir Richard de la Roche 1199 1283 of Strongbow s army 4 Mazo eventually adopted the de la Roche surname claiming that it was a nod to French heritage 1 5 6 The Roche family moved frequently throughout Southern Ontario during her childhood because of her mother s ill health and her father s work as a travelling salesman 1 She lived successively in Newmarket 1879 85 at least two separate addresses in Toronto 1885 88 several dwellings in Orillia 1888 91 Galt 1891 92 Orillia again 1892 94 and Toronto again 1894 1900 7 4 She was a lonely child who became an avid reader and developed her own fictional world The Play in which she created imaginary scenes and characters One of the family s moves meant some years on a farm owned by a wealthy man who farmed as a hobby There de la Roche began to develop her fictional world of rural aristocracy that would years later become Jalna When de la Roche was seven her parents adopted her orphaned eight year old cousin Caroline Clement who joined in Mazo s fantasy world game and would become her lifelong companion De la Roche wrote her first short story at age 9 She attended high school at Jameson Collegiate now Parkdale Collegiate Institute in west end Toronto and later studied at the Metropolitan School of Music the University of Toronto and the Ontario School of Art all in Toronto 7 Early writing career edit De la Roche then 23 had her first story published in 1902 in Munsey s Magazine but very shortly thereafter in February 1903 she suffered a mental breakdown For the next several years she suffered from depression and insomnia and did not write In 1905 Roche and Caroline moved with Mazo s parents to Acton Ontario to operate the Acton House hotel 8 She was known locally as Maisie Roach 9 and lived there until 1908 selling one of her stories while she was there 10 Her novel Delight was based on her time there 8 and Acton s geography figures notably in Possession 9 A few years later in 1911 by now in her early thirties de la Roche moved with Caroline and the Roches to Sovereign House in Bronte Ontario to try life as farm owners By now de la Roche had resumed writing and was placing stories in American magazines on an occasional basis William Roche Mazo s father died in 1915 11 of cirrhosis of the liver brought on by alcoholism de la Roche her mother Alberta and Caroline moved back to Toronto De la Roche continued to write but at this juncture Caroline Clement was the main breadwinner of the household working as a civil service clerk She would eventually rise to become the province of Ontario s chief statistician During the summers Clement lived in a Toronto boarding house while de la Roche and her mother would stay in a cottage near Lake Simcoe several hours north of the city Alberta Roche died in 1920 After this de la Roche s writing career began in earnest and Clement and de la Roche were never again separated for any significant length of time During most of the 1920s they split their time between Toronto and a cottage they had built in Clarkson Ontario Her first published book Explorers of the Dawn appeared in 1922 and was a fix up of some previously published sketches vignettes and stories rewritten to work within an overarching narrative framework Her first two proper novels Possession 1923 and Delight 1926 were romantic novels which were mild successes but nevertheless earned her little in income or recognition De la Roche also wrote plays and short stories through this period Her third novel Jalna was submitted to the American magazine Atlantic Monthly winning a 10 000 award Its victory and subsequent publication in 1927 brought de la Roche fame and fortune at the age of 48 nbsp Benares Historic House and Bianca de la Roche Mazo De La Roche amp Caroline Clement ca 1930s Jalna series edit Further information Jalna novel series Jalna was an immediate sensation with the public demanding sequels and prequels for the rest of de la Roche s life Though she would continue to write other works the series known as the Jalna series or the Whiteoak Chronicles would dominate the rest of her writing career The series tells the story of one hundred years of the Whiteoak family covering from 1854 to 1954 The 16 Jalna novels were not written in sequential order however and each can be read as an independent story There are similarities and differences in the experiences of the Whiteoak family and that of de la Roche While the lives and successes of the Whiteoaks rise and fall there remained for them the steadiness of the family manor known as Jalna de la Roche s family endured the illness of her mother the perpetual job searches of her father and the adoption of her orphaned cousin while being moved 17 times Several critics believe that Finch Whiteoak who majors in Finch s Fortune 1932 is a reflection of de la Roche herself He was a somewhat tortured concert pianist with overtones of gayness 12 The names of many of the characters were taken from gravestones in a Newmarket Ontario cemetery Bestselling author edit The sudden bout of fame was not an immediate blessing for de la Roche as the stress of the attendant publicity caused her to experience another breakdown in early 1928 13 She eventually recovered and began writing a sequel to Jalna which was published in 1929 The income from Jalna and its sequels allowed de la Roche to become the main breadwinner of the household after years of having been supported by Clement The two would make an extended trip to Europe beginning in 1929 living first in Italy then in the United Kingdom In 1931 they adopted the two orphaned children of friends of theirs 14 This was extremely unusual for the time as adoptions by single women were technically not allowed in the UK during this era the machinations by which de la Roche and Clement were able to do this are unknown The family returned to Toronto for a time in 1934 35 heading back to England again in 1936 before returning to Toronto for good in 1939 She purchased a home at 3590 Bayview Avenue the same year eventually adding two wings to what would become a 17 room mansion 5 Originally built in 1922 de la Roche lived in the home until 1945 when she and her family relocated to Forest Hill where it was easier to secure staff and get the children to and from school 5 6 During this era de la Roche reliably published at least one book a year sometimes more However although her early work had received positive critical notices critical reaction to her newer works was often decidedly cool in both North America and Europe 4 Nevertheless the Jalna books were still strong sellers with a wide and appreciative readership De la Roche s productivity slowed somewhat once she was in her sixties and seventies Partly due to arthritis in her hands much of her later work was dictated to Clement She still published regularly right up to her death with her final novel Morning at Jalna appearing in 1960 when she was 81 Mazo and Caroline Clement edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Overall de la Roche and Caroline Clement lived a fairly reclusive life and their relationship was not discussed widely in the press In her infrequent interviews de la Roche often expressed a need for privacy Though there has been much speculation without evidence in recent years as to the exact nature of the relationship between de la Roche and Clement de la Roche s autobiography makes no mention of them being anything other than close companions Not long after de la Roche s death in 1961 in accordance with her wishes Clement burned almost all of the author s personal diaries Clement died in 1972 Most recently de la Roche was the subject of a Red Queen Productions and National Film Board of Canada co production The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche which premiered on March 17 2012 at the Festival international du film sur l art in Montreal then had its Toronto premiere at Hot Docs April 29 2012 The film is directed by Maya Gallus produced by Justine Pimlott and Anita Lee and combines archival material with dramatic reenactments featuring Severn Thompson as Mazo de la Roche 15 The film lend s credence to the theory that its subject was a closeted lesbian 16 although several people in the film who knew de la Roche and Clement including their adopted daughter Esmee state on camera that they believe the relationship between the two was close but ultimately platonic Death and legacy edit De la Roche died on July 12 1961 1 She was buried at the St George s Anglican Church cemetery at Sibbald Point near Sutton Ontario 1 Her grave site is located near Canadian writer Stephen Leacock 1 Later Caroline Clement was buried alongside her nbsp December 1927 The Jalna series has sold more than eleven million copies in 193 English and 92 foreign editions In 1935 the film Jalna based on the novel was released by RKO Radio Pictures and in 1972 a CBC television series was produced based on the series which actually used the historic Benares house as the principal filming location This century old Georgian revival home which is situated in Clarkson Ontario is believed to be the inspiration for Jalna hence the reason for the name of this of this subdivision when the original large Benares estate was severed and sold off to residential developers in the late 1960s 17 Benares and Jalna are in fact both names of Indian cities It is now maintained by the Museums of Mississauga 18 A nearby park is named Whiteoaks in honour of the series as is a nearby elementary school Streets in the area also bear names such as Mazo Crescent Jalna Avenue Roche Court and Whiteoaks Avenue Her house at 3590 Bayview Avenue in Toronto Ontario was bought by The Zoroastrian Society of Ontario in 1978 and continues to serve as the society s community centre as of February 2021 5 6 19 It is listed as a City of Toronto Heritage Property 20 6 In the 1970s a land developer in London Ontario used the characters from de la Roche s Jalna series to name streets for a new subdivision named White Oaks Street names used from the Jalna series include Jalna Boulevard Ernest Avenue Renny Crescent Finch Crescent Nicholas Crescent Alayne Crescent Archer Crescent Piers Crescent Meg Drive 21 In 1990 a French immersion public school in de la Roche s birthplace of Newmarket Ontario was named in her honour 22 Responding to an enquiry on the pronunciation of her name her secretary told The Literary Digest Her Christian name is pronounced may zo and Roche is pronounced rosh to rhyme with Foch 23 Works editNovels edit The following table can be sorted to show Mazo de la Roche s novels in chronological order or arranged alphabetically by title by publisher or by series Year Title Publisher Series Order Notes 1922 Explorers of the Dawn Knopf 1923 Possession Macmillan Reprinted C Chivers 1973 1926 Delight Macmillan Reprinted with introduction by Desmond Pacey McClelland and Stewart 1961 1927 Jalna Little Brown Jalna 7 ISBN 0 316 18000 9 1929 Whiteoaks of Jalna Little Brown Jalna 8 Also published as Whiteoaks Macmillan 1929 ISBN 0 316 18014 9 1930 Portrait of a Dog Little Brown Immortalizes the author s beloved Scottish Terrier 1932 Finch s Fortune Little Brown Jalna 9 ISBN 0 333 09966 4 1932 Lark Ascending Little Brown 1932 The Thunder of the New Wings Little Brown 1933 The Master of Jalna Little Brown Jalna 10 ISBN 0 316 18002 5 1934 Beside a Norman Tower Little Brown 1935 Young Renny Little Brown Jalna 4 ISBN 0 333 01371 9 1936 Whiteoak Harvest Little Brown Jalna 11 ISBN 0 333 07404 1 1937 The Very Little House Little Brown 1938 Growth of a Man Little Brown 1940 Whiteoak Heritage Little Brown Jalna 5 ISBN 0 333 05090 8 1941 Wakefield s Course Little Brown Jalna 12 ISBN 0 316 18010 6 1942 The Two Saplings Macmillan 1944 Building of Jalna Little Brown Jalna 1 ISBN 0 316 17996 5 1946 Return to Jalna Little Brown Jalna 13 ISBN 0 333 04842 3 1949 Mary Wakefield Little Brown Jalna 3 ISBN 0 333 07652 4 1951 Renny s Daughter Little Brown Jalna 14 ISBN 0 333 08561 2 1953 Whiteoak Brothers Little Brown Jalna 6 ISBN 0 333 08809 3 1954 Variable Winds at Jalna Little Brown Jalna 15 ISBN 0 333 02280 7 1955 The Song of Lambert Macmillan Juvenile 1958 Centenary at Jalna Little Brown Jalna 16 ISBN 0 316 17997 3 1958 Bill and Coo Macmillan Juvenile 1960 Morning at Jalna Little Brown Jalna 2 ISBN 0 333 03933 5 Plays edit Low Life A Comedy in One Act first produced as Low Life in Toronto Ontario at Trinity Memorial Hall May 14 1925 Macmillan 1925 Come True first produced in Toronto at Trinity Memorial Hall May 16 1927 Macmillan 1927 The Return of the Emigrant first produced in Toronto at Trinity Memorial Hall March 12 1928 Collected in Low Life and Other Plays contains Low Life Come True and The Return of the Emigrant Little Brown 1929 ISBN 1 131 68067 7 With Nancy Price Whiteoaks A Play adapted from Whiteoaks of Jalna first produced in London England at Little Theatre in the Adelphi April 13 1936 produced on Broadway 1938 Macmillan 1936 ISBN 0 333 06247 7 nbsp Bain News Service LOC ggbain 24645 Mazo De La Roche Mistress of Jalna first produced in Bromley Kent England at New Theatre November 12 1951 Short story collections edit The Sacred Bullock and Other Stories of Animals Little Brown 1939 ISBN 0 8369 3186 6 A Boy in the House and Other Stories Little Brown 1952 Selected Stories of Mazo de la Roche edited and introduced by Douglas Daymond University of Ottawa Press 1979 ISBN 2 7603 4340 5 Non fiction edit Quebec Historic Seaport non fiction Doubleday 1944 ISBN 1 121 26423 9 Ringing the Changes An Autobiography Little Brown 1957 ISBN 1 141 37942 2 Author of introduction George F Nelson editor Northern Lights A New Collection of Distinguished Writing by Canadian Authors Doubleday 1960 OCLC 1395116 LCCN 60 9741 Related works edit Jalna 1935 film based on the novel IMDb The Whiteoaks of Jalna 1972 CBC TV series based on the Jalna series IMDbSee also editLorne Pierce MedalReferences edit a b c d e f Crowe Grande Trish 9 August 2020 Exploring the early years of Newmarket literary icon Mazo de la Roche NewmarketToday ca Retrieved 4 February 2021 Mazo de la Roche Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 4 February 2021 The Willson Family PDF www sharontemple ca Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2013 Retrieved September 25 2013 a b c de la Roche Mazo 1957 Ringing the Changes Dundurn Press ISBN 9781459736177 a b c d The Home of Mazo de la Roche 3950 Bayview Avenue North York Historical Society March 2018 Retrieved 4 February 2021 a b c d Goldenberg Susan 28 December 2019 Opinion Bestselling author Mazo de la Roche called North York home for 6 years Toronto com Retrieved 4 February 2021 a b Mazo de la Roche Simon Fraser University 2014 a b Coles Hartley January 8 1997 Why the omission Acton Tanner p 6 a b Coles Hartley July 19 2007 Acton knew her as plain Maisie Roach worldwide she was Mazo de la Roche New Tanner Acton Mazo de la Roche Here a Year Father Ran Main St Hotel The Acton Free Press July 20 1961 p 1 Died Roche The Acton Free Press July 8 1915 p 2 p 37 Not in Front of the Audience by Nicholas de Jongh Plummer Kevin June 28 2014 Historicist Revealing Fictions Torontoist Mazo de la Roche AndrejKoymasky com Archived from the original on October 17 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 26 Weldon Carolyne 16 March 2012 Feature film on Canada s most famous unknown author premieres at FIFA NFB ca Blog National Film Board of Canada Retrieved 31 March 2012 Carrington Julian April 23 2012 The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche Torontoist Benares Historic House Museums of Mississauga Zoroastrian Society of Ontario About us www zso org Retrieved 4 February 2021 City of Toronto s Inventory of Heritage Properties Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Google Map of White Oaks Mazo de la Roche P S York Region District School Board Retrieved May 6 2019 Charles Earle Funk What s the Name Please Funk amp Wagnalls 1936 Further reading edit Petri Liukkonen Mazo de la Roche Books and Writers Virginia Careless Mazo De La Roche Mistress of Jalna 1879 1961 Retrieved June 23 2005 Archive of article at the Wayback Machine archived June 3 2006 Mazo de la Roche Public School 2004 History Mazo de la Roche 1879 1961 Retrieved June 23 2005 The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2004 de la Roche Mazo Retrieved June 23 2005 Ontario Museum Association 2005 Benares Historic House Retrieved June 23 2005 James H Marsh ed 1990 The Junior Encyclopedia of Canada Edmonton Hurtig Publishers Ltd ISBN 0 88830 334 3 Ellie Friedman amp Joyce Y Carter 1995 The Jalna Series or The Whiteoak Chronicles by Mazo de la Roche Retrieved June 26 2005 Biography de la Roche Mazo 1879 1961 2004 Contemporary Authors Thomson Gale D M Daymond 1976 Nature Culture and Love Mazo De La Roche s Explorers of the Dawn and The Thunder of New Wings Studies in Canadian Literature 1 2 Joan Doig 1980 Mazo de la Roche s Delight An Unexpected Source Studies in Canadian Literature 5 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazo de la Roche nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Mazo de la Roche Mazo de la Roche s entry in The Canadian Encyclopedia Mazo de la Roche at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Google map of Benares Historic House Ontario Plaques Mazo de la Roche Electronic editions edit Works by Mazo de la Roche at Faded Page Canada Works by Mazo de la Roche at Project Gutenberg Works by Mazo de la Roche at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by or about Mazo de la Roche at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en 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