This story of an Ontario family named Whiteoak and its home Jalna won the Atlantic Monthly award for the best novel of that year. Sequels depicted other episodes in the history of the Whiteoaks. Young Renny (1935) was several months on the New York Herald bestseller list. A play based on the Jalna stories was a hit in London, New York and Toronto and inspired a Hollywood film. Her books continued to sell well after WWII (20 of her books were still in print in 1960), although her novels of the 1950s do not compare well with her earlier work. In 1972 the CBC produced a TV series based on the Jalna stories.
Although still a best-selling author, Mazo de la Roche was not taken seriously by critics after WWII. Her later works too closely resembled formula romances and succumbed to sentimentality. This later criticism has been unfairly extended to the full body of her work, including her earlier novels, which are distinguished by well-defined characters, good dialogue and subtle imagery. One of the greatest of 20th-century Canadian writers, she is also one of the most underrated.
Author C.J. TAYLOR
Suggested Reading
R. Hambleton, Mazo de la Roche of Jalna (1966).
Links to Other Sites
Mazo de la Roche
A profile of writer Mazo de la Roche. From Library and Archives Canada.


The Dominion government's advertisement asked for volunteers "able to read and write either the English or French language" with "good antecedents" who were good horsemen...
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