Jean Hager
{{Short description|American writer (born 1932)}}
{{Infobox writer
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| name = Jean Hager
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| pseudonym = Leah Crane, Marlaine Kyle, Amanda McAllister, Sara North, Jeanne Stephens
| birth_name = Jean Wilma Hager
| birth_date = June 2, 1932
| birth_place = Maywood, Illinois{{cite book|last=Swanson|first=Jean|editor=Pederson, Jay P.|title=St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers|chapter=Hager, (Wilma) Jean|pages=467–68|publisher=St. James Press|location=Detroit|year=1996|edition=4th|isbn=1-55862-178-4}}
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| occupation = Writer of mysteries and romance novels
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- Oklahoma State University, 1950–53
- University of Tulsa, 1964–66
- Central State University, B.A., 1969
- University of Oklahoma, graduate study, 1969–70
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| spouses = Kenneth C. Hager (1953)
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- Oklahoma Writers Federation Teepee Award (five times)
- Oklahoma Writer of the Year (1982)
- Oklahoma Professional Writers Hall of Fame (1992)
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Jean Hager (born June 2, 1932) is an American writer of mystery fiction, children's fiction, and romance novels. She has published romance novels under the pseudonyms Jeanne Stephens, Leah Crane, Marlaine Kyle, Amanda McAllister, and Sara North, as well as in her own name.{{cite web|title=Jean Hager|work=Contemporary Authors Online|publisher=Gale|year=2003|url=https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/H1000040964/BIC?u=|url-access=subscription|access-date=February 11, 2021}} Two of her three mystery series involve modern Cherokee life in Oklahoma and feature either police chief Mitch Bushyhead or civil rights investigator Molly Bearpaw. The third series is set in Iris House, a bed and breakfast establishment in Missouri that features amateur sleuth Tess Darcy.{{cite news|last=Gay|first=Stephen W.| title=Success Is No Mystery for South Tulsa Author|url=https://tulsaworld.com/archive/success-is-no-mystery-for-south-tulsa-author/article_78126f51-0a29-5afe-a373-d2dfd0fe49f2.html|newspaper=Tulsa World|date=April 10, 1996|access-date=February 11, 2021}}
Hager attended Oklahoma State University from 1950 to 1953, the University of Tulsa from 1964 to 1966, completed a B.A. at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, in 1969, and did graduate study at the University of Oklahoma in 1969–70. After teaching high school English from 1970 through 1974, she turned to full-time writing in 1975.
She won the Oklahoma Writers Federation Teepee Award five times, was named Oklahoma Writer of the Year in 1982, and was inducted into the Oklahoma Professional Writers Hall of Fame in 1992. Her professional memberships have included Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, and American Crime Writers.
Critical reception
Jean Swanson in St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers said in 1996 that the Mitch Bushyhead books are essentially Cherokee-related police procedurals and that the Molly Bearpaw series focuses more on Cherokee culture than the Bushyhead series. The Iris House books belong to a subcategory of mysteries known as "cozies".
Of the Bushyhead mystery The Grandfather Medicine, a reviewer for Publishers Weekly said, "The prose here is serviceable and the puzzle smoothly concocted and solved."{{cite web|title=The Grandfather Medicine|url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-312-02923-4|publisher=PWxyx|date=January 1, 1989|access-date=February 13, 2021}} The Publishers Weekly review for The Redbird's Cry, a Molly Bearpaw mystery, said, "Although the politics are sometimes cursorily handled, Hager explores the Cherokee culture with trenchant compassion rather than overcareful reverence and deftly inserts hairpin turns into the narrative."{{cite web|title=The Redbird's Cry|url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/9780892964949|publisher=PWxyx|date=April 4, 1994|access-date=February 13, 2021}}
Publishers Weekly treated her Molly Bearpaw series more positively than did Kirkus Reviews, calling it an entertaining series and saying that the writer "captures the rhythms of life in Tahlequah and creates in Bearpaw a charming and intelligent--albeit reluctant--detective."{{cite web|title=Ravenmocker|url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/9780892964932|publisher=PWxyz|date=November 30, 1992|access-date=February 14, 2021}} Kirkus praised her plotting but noted a lack of "motivation" for the murders themselves. About her 1994 book The Redbird's Cry, Kirkus said it was not a match for her Bushyhead adventures, as it was slow-moving and "padded" with chatter and romances.{{cite web|title=The Redbird's Cry|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jean-hager/the-redbirds-cry/|publisher=Kirkus Media|date=February 15, 1994|access-date=February 14, 2021}} Kirkus wrote for the 1995 book Seven Black Stones that "While the chilly disharmonies of failing marriages get sensitive treatment here," the murder plot seems "undermotivated."{{cite web|title=Seven Black Stones|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jean-hager/seven-black-stones/|publisher=Kirkus Media|date=February 15, 1995|access-date=February 14, 2021}} Her 1996 book The Fire Carrier was called "labored" and "not one of Hager's better efforts" by Kirkus.{{cite web|title=The Fire Carrier|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jean-hager/the-fire-carrier/|publisher=Kirkus Media|date=April 1, 1996|access-date=February 14, 2021}} Kirkus called her 1997 book The Spirit Caller "tidily plotted and mildly entertaining, with special appeal to aficionados of Native American lore",{{cite web|title=The Spirit Caller|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jean-hager/the-spirit-caller/|publisher=Kirkus Media|date=March 1, 1997|access-date=February 14, 2021}} and her 1998 book Masked Dancers "tidily plotted but uncompellingly motivated."{{cite web|title=Masked Dancers|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jean-hager/masked-dancers/|publisher=Kirkus Media|date=March 15, 1998|access-date=February 14, 2021}}
Bibliography
=Mystery novels=
For children
- The Secret of Riverside Farm (1970) {{isbn|978-0-8114-7708-6}}
- The Whispering House (1970) {{isbn|978-0-8114-7703-1}}
For adults
- Terror in the Sunlight (1976) {{oclc|495913317}}
- Yellow-Flower Moon (1981) {{isbn|978-0-385-17324-7}}
- Captured by Love (1982) {{isbn|978-0-440-11122-1}}
- The Grandfather Medicine (1989) {{isbn|978-0-312-02923-4}}
- Night Walker (1990) {{isbn|978-0-312-05138-9}}
- Ravenmocker (1992) {{isbn|978-0-446-40107-4}}
- Ghostland (1992) {{isbn|978-0-312-06982-7}}
- The Redbird's Cry (1994) {{isbn|978-0-446-40106-7}}
- Blooming Murder (1994) {{isbn|978-0-380-77209-4}}
- Seven Black Stones (1995) {{isbn|978-0-89296-565-6}}
- Dead and Buried (1995) {{isbn|978-0-380-77210-0}}
- Death on the Drunkard's Path (1996) {{isbn|978-0-380-77211-7}}
- The Fire Carrier (1996) {{isbn|978-0-446-40387-0}}
- The Last Noel (1997) {{isbn|978-0-380-78637-4}}
- The Spirit Caller (1997) {{isbn|978-0-446-60595-3}}
- Masked Dancers (1998) {{isbn|978-0-89296-641-7}}
- Weigh Dead (1999) {{isbn|978-0-380-80375-0}}
- Sew Deadly (2000) {{isbn|978-0-380-78638-1}}
- Bride and Doom (2001) {{isbn|978-0-380-80376-7}}
=Romance novels=
As Jean Hager
- Terror in the Sunlight (1977) {{oclc|495913317}}
- Web of Desire (1981) {{isbn|978-0-440-19434-7}}
- Portrait of Love (1981) {{isbn|978-0-440-17013-6}}
- Secret Intentions (1985) {{isbn|978-0-440-17632-9}}
- The Passionate Solution (1986) {{isbn|978-0-440-16777-8}}
As Amanda McAllister
- No Need for Fear (1976) {{oclc|7602615}}
- Trust No One at All (1976) {{oclc|1090874264}}
- Waiting for Caroline (1976) {{oclc|1090842242}}
- Pretty Enough to Kill (1976) {{oclc|1090908467}}
As Sara North
- Jasmine for My Grave (1978) {{isbn|978-0-87216-494-9}}
- Evil Side of Eden (1978) {{isbn|978-0-87216-451-2}}
- Shadow of the Tamaracks (1979) {{isbn|978-0-87216-553-3}}
As Jeanne Stephens
- Mexican Nights (1980) {{isbn|978-0-340-26443-0}}
- Wonder and Wild Desire (1981) {{isbn|978-0-671-57080-4}}
- Bride in Barbados (1982) {{isbn|978-0-340-32616-9}}
- Sweet Jasmine (1982) {{isbn|978-0-671-57189-4}}
- The Splendored Sky (1983) {{isbn|978-0-671-53584-1}}
- No Other Love (1983) {{isbn|978-0-671-53608-4}}
- Reckless Surrender (1983) {{isbn|978-0-671-47136-1}}
- Memories (1984) {{isbn|978-0-671-47138-5}}
- Mandy's Song (1985) {{isbn|978-0-373-09217-8}}
- Coming Home (1985) {{isbn|978-0-373-09252-9}}
- This Long Winter Past (1986) {{isbn|978-0-373-09295-6}}
- Whispers on the Wind (1986) {{isbn|978-0-373-07127-2}}
- A Few Shining Hours (1986) {{isbn|978-0-373-50436-7}}
- Long Winter Past (1986) {{isbn|978-0-373-09295-6}}
- Return to Eden (1987) {{isbn|978-0-373-09372-4}}
- Neptune Summer (1987) {{isbn|978-0-373-50839-6}}
- Dangerous Choices (1988) {{isbn|978-0-373-07259-0}}
- Sharing California (1989) {{isbn|978-0-373-57716-3}}
- Wild Horizons (1989) {{isbn|978-0-373-28618-8}}
- At Risk (1989) {{isbn|978-0-373-07308-5}}
- Hiding Places (1990) {{isbn|978-0-373-07353-5}}
- Summer Heat (1991) {{isbn|978-0-373-07380-1}}
As Marlaine Kyle
- A Suitable Marriage (1982) {{isbn|978-0-440-18406-5}}
As Leah Crane
- Dark Ecstasy (1983) {{isbn|978-0-373-70066-0}}
=Other=
As Jean Hager
- How to Write & Market Your Mystery Novel: A Step-by-Step Guide from Idea to Final Rewrite and Marketing (1998) {{isbn|978-0-9662145-0-5}}
References
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Category:20th-century American women writers
Category:American crime fiction writers
Category:Writers from Oklahoma
Category:Oklahoma State University alumni
Category:University of Tulsa alumni
Category:University of Central Oklahoma alumni