Linda Grace Hoyer Updike

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Linda Hoyer Updike, 1923 yearbook photo
Linda Hoyer Updike baby photo in yearbook
Her home in Shillington

Linda Grace Hoyer Updike (1904–1989) was an American writer from Plowville, Pennsylvania. She was the mother of the writer John Updike and grandmother of the writer David Updike. Linda Updike also served as the model for several of her son's characters, including one of the main characters in the novel Of the Farm.

Linda Grace Hoyer (Updike) was born on June 20, 1904, on an 83-acre farm in Plowville, Pennsylvania, the only child of John Hoyer and Katherine Kramer Hoyer, who were of mainly German ancestry.[1] The family attended Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church.[2] Her parents sold their farm in 1921 and moved a large house in the nearby town of Shillington, Pennsylvania.[3] Updike graduated from Keystone Normal School (now Kutztown University), and in 1923, at age 19, from Ursinus College, where she played field hockey.[4][5] In 1924 she received a M.A. in English literature from Cornell University, where she wrote a thesis on Sir Walter Scott's The Bride of Lammermoor.[6]

Marriage and birth of John Updike

Later writer career, death and legacy

References

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