

An edition of The little locksmith (1943)
a memoir
By Katharine Butler Hathaway
Publish Date
2000
Publisher
Feminist Press at the City University of New York
Language
eng
Pages
237
Description:
This is the memoir of Katharine Butler Hathaway. Born in Salem, Massachusetts, 1890, she attended Radcliffe college and later went on to write of her experiences in Maine, New York City, and Paris during the artists' culture of the 1920s. She writes of her life from her childhood with spinal tuberculosis at the age of five. She spent the next 5 years strapped to a board ... her body eventually became deformed as she never grew any large than that of a ten-year-old child. As she grows up, Katharine, begins to discover the value of her life, her self, and her independence.
subjects: Pott's disease, American Authors, Patients, American Women authors, Women, Biography, People with disabilities, biography, Spinal Tuberculosis
People: Katharine Butler Hathaway (1890-1942)
Places: Castine, Castine (Me.), Maine
Times: 20th century