Ann Warren Griffith (died May 11, 1983) was an American writer of humorous essays and science fiction.

Early life

Ann Gilman Warren was born in Newton, Massachusetts, in 1911 or 1918 (sources vary on this date). She attended Barnard College.[1]

Career

During World War II, she was a member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) program, graduating from flight school in August 1944.[2] After the war, she worked for the Red Cross running a canteen at Wildflecken, an experience she wrote about for The New Yorker.[3][4]

Griffith wrote for The New Yorker, The American Mercury,[5] The Atlantic, and Pegasus (an aviation magazine). Her comic magazine pieces – with titles like "How to Make Housework Easy the Hard Way" and "Gentlemen, Your Tranquilizers are Showing" – were collected in Who Is Hiding in my Hide-a-Bed? (1958). "Ann Warren Griffith must surely be the wackiest of writers ever to set a salty witticism down on paper," began one review of this compilation.[6] She also wrote about television and advertising in syndicated newspaper articles.[7]

Griffith wrote at least two stories in the science fiction genre: "Zeritsky's Law" (Galaxy Science Fiction 1951)[8] and "Captive Audience" (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 1953).[9] Both stories have been included in several anthologies since publication. "Captive Audience" is a satire about overwhelming advertising on mobile devices, appliances, and packaging, and the desperate search for spaces without constant commercial messages.[10][11]

Personal life

Ann Warren married after World War II. Ann Warren Griffith died in 1983, in her sixties or early seventies.[1] In 2016 her story "Captive Audience" was reissued in French, as a monograph.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 Ann Warren Griffith, ISFDB.com
  2. The Women Pilots of World War II.
  3. Adam R. Seipp, Strangers in the Wild Place: Refugees, Americans, and a German Town, 1945-1952 (Indiana University Press 2013). ISBN 9780253007070
  4. Ann Warren Griffith, "Babes in the Wildflecken Woods" The New Yorker (October 28, 1950): 61.
  5. Ann Griffith, "The Magazines Women Read" The American Mercury (March 1949), anthologized in Nancy A. Walker, ed., Women's Magazines, 1940-1960: Gender Roles and the Popular Press (Spring 2016): 234-241. ISBN 9781137050687
  6. Henry Cavendish, "These May Have You Rolling in the Aisle" Chicago Tribune (November 16, 1958): 237. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  7. Ann Warren Griffith, "Subtle TV Ads Expected in '61" Janesville Daily Gazette (January 18, 1961): 24. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  8. Ann Griffith, "Zeritsky's Law" Galaxy Science Fiction (November 1951), at Project GutenbergOpen access icon.
  9. Ann Warren Griffith, "Captive Audience" The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (August 1953): 52-62.
  10. Charles R. Acland, Swift Viewing: The Popular Life of Subliminal Influence (Duke University Press 2012): 159. ISBN 9780822349198
  11. Lyman Tower Sargent, Utopian Literature in English: An Annotated Bibliography From 1516 to the Present (Penn State University Libraries).
  12. Ann Warren Griffith, Audience Captive (Le Passager Clandestin 2016). ISBN 9782369350491
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