Hilda Van Stockum (1908–2006)
Author of The Winged Watchman
About the Author
Image credit: Hilda van Stockum
Series
Works by Hilda Van Stockum
Associated Works
The Young Folks' Shelf of Books, Volume 04: Just Around the Corner (1962) — Contributor — 163 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 11, July 1977 — Translator — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Marlin, Hilda Gerarda van Stockum
- Birthdate
- 1908-02-08
- Date of death
- 2006-11-01
- Burial location
- Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, England, UK
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Netherlands
- Birthplace
- Rotterdam, Netherlands
- Places of residence
- Dublin, Ireland
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Washington, D.C., USA
Montréal, Québec, Canada
Paris, France
Geneva, Switzerland (show all 7)
Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, England, UK - Education
- Irish Academy of Art
Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunst - Occupations
- artist
illustrator
children's book author
translator (of books from Dutch)
painter - Relationships
- Millay, Edna St. Vincent (aunt)
Boissevain, Charles (grandfather) - Agent
- John Tepper Marlin (executor)
Jack Sharpe (Bethlehem Books) - Short biography
- Hilda van Stockum was born in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and grew up there, near Amsterdam, and in Ireland, the only child of Capt. Bram van Stockum, an officer in the Dutch Royal Navy, and his wife Olga Boissevain.
Her maternal grandfather Charles Boissevain was an editor of the Algemeen Handelsblad, an influential Dutch newspaper. Hilda began writing as a child. She attended art school in Amsterdam and later in Dublin, where she met her future husband, Ervin Ross "Spike" Marlin, a friend of her brother Willem van Stockum, later an important mathematician. The couple married in 1932 and had six children who featured in many of her books.
By 1935, the family was living in Washington, D.C., where Marlin worked for the Social Security Administration. Later Hilda and the children accompanied him to other assignments in Ireland and London.
She translated books from the Dutch, worked as a freelance children's book illustrator, and wrote a dozen of her own children's books, beginning with A Day on Skates (1934), which won a Newbery Honor. Over the next four decades, she produced a book a year. She memorialized her brother Willem, who was killed piloting a bomber over France in World War II, in her book The Mitchells (1945). Perhaps her best known work was The Winged Watchman (1962), based on a true story about the Dutch Resistance in World War II. In the 1960s and 1970s, Hilda began concentrating on more ambitious painting projects and shows of her work were held at galleries in Dublin, Geneva, Ottawa, and Washington. In 1993, her still life "Pears in a Copper Pot" appeared on an Irish postage stamp as part of a series honoring contemporary art.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 25
- Also by
- 9
- Members
- 3,568
- Popularity
- #7,107
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 20
- ISBNs
- 55
- Languages
- 5
- Favorited
- 5
Some of my siblings remembered the book better than I did. For me, this story was almost all new to me, so that made me want to keep going. Even the ones that did remember the story better wanted to keep reading, and one, especially (who hardly ever takes the time to sit down and read!) threatened several times to bring it out and continue reading it aloud because he just couldn’t wait to find out what happened next. That’s the mark of a truly good book, in my opinion—to be able to capture attention so well!
The book itself tells an incredible story. Not only is it a portrait of Holland in days gone by—the iconic windmill being a central feature in the story—it’s also the story of a family working together against the evil creeping into their area of the world. They didn’t do anything truly remarkable, in one sense; they just took each thing as it came and did what they believed was right—but they did make a huge difference to those whose lives they touched, and that was special to see. The story isn’t easy in all ways, but it’s realistic. Bad things do happen, but our job is to keep trusting in God’s plan.
I’m grateful I had the chance to revisit this story with my siblings. It ended up being our favorite read-aloud so far this year, and it’s going to be hard to top it in terms of the way it gripped our imaginations and made us want to keep reading long after dishes were finished for the evening. If you and your family enjoy solid, well-written historical fiction, but haven’t read this book yet, I’d highly recommend you check it out.… (more)