Jean Stafford (born July 1, 1915, Covina, California, U.S.—died March 26, 1979, White Plains, New York) was an American short-story writer and novelist noted for her disaffected female characters, who often must confront restrictive societal conventions and institutions as they come of age.
After graduating from the University of Colorado at Boulder (B.A., 1936; M.A., 1936), Stafford studied at Heidelberg University in Germany (1936–37). When she returned to the United States and settled in Boston, she painstakingly completed a four-year effort, the novel Boston Adventure (1944), which presents the experiences of a young woman who leaves her working-class immigrant family to work for a wealthy Boston spinster. The book became a best seller, with sales reaching 400,000 copies, and its publication launched Stafford’s career.
Her second and most critically acclaimed novel, The Mountain Lion (1947), reinforced her position of prominence in literary circles. An examination of the influence of gender roles on identity and development, it details the coming of age of a brother and sister who spend summers at their uncle’s ranch. Stafford later published The Catherine Wheel (1952) as well as children’s books.
An accomplished short-story writer, she contributed frequently to such journals as The New Yorker, Kenyon Review, Partisan Review, and Harper’s Bazaar. The Collected Stories of Jean Stafford (1969) won a Pulitzer Prize in 1970.
Stafford’s personal life was marked by bouts of alcoholism and illnesses and by three troubled marriages (to writers Robert Lowell, Oliver Jensen, and A.J. Liebling).