Mystery Monday: Ruth Sawtell Wallis
Anthropologist and Novelist
Better known in the academic world of anthropology for
her research and discoveries, Ruth Sawtell Wallis wrote mystery novels. Her
first, Too May Bones, was published
in 1943. She received an undergraduate degree in English from Radcliffe
College, after which she traveled to Europe as part of her graduate program in
anthropology at Columbia University. A brilliant scientist, Ruth went on to
receive her doctorate and began to teach at the University of Iowa. A year
later, she married Professor Wilson Dallam Wallis, and as was typical of the era,
lost her job as a result. Over the years she was able to work in her field
intermittently, and she also collaborated on books with her husband.
According to her obituary written by a colleague, Ruth
began to write mysteries in 1940 while recovering from a serious illness. Her
books involve academic settings, and anthropology plays an integral part in the
solution to the crimes. Set in a museum, Too
Many Bones won the Red Badge Prize for best mystery of the year. When her novels
were written, there were no “sub-genres” in the mystery book industry, however,
hers may very well be the first in that now popular sub-genre.
Check out the map from the back of the dust jacket! Perhaps another first in the mystery genre.
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