Mollee Kruger | |
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Born | Mollee Coppel March 28, 1929 (age 95) Bel Air, Maryland, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of Maryland, College Park |
Occupation | Writer |
Years active | 1941–present |
Website | http://www.molleekruger.com/ |
Mollee Kruger (born March 28, 1929) is an American poet, journalist, and memorialist who currently lives in Rockville, Maryland.[1] She is best known for her light verse about history and politics as well as contemporary Jewish themes underscored by Biblical references.
Kruger’s eclectic work appeared in ‘Unholy Writ’, a weekly syndicated column of light verse, which ran from 1967–1987 in the Jewish press.[2] Often compared to Ogden Nash and Dorothy Parker, she has written seven poetry collections, two of them on feminist topics. Her most recent work includes The Cobbler’s Last, a memoir of small-town life during the Great Depression, and Swift Seasons, a novel about love and aging, published in 2016 when she was eighty-seven.[3]
Kruger's papers are held by on Special Collections and University Archives at the University of Maryland, her alma mater.[4] Her husband was metallurgist Jerome Kruger, an employee of NIST and professor at Johns Hopkins.[5]