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Ruth Crocker
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ruth Whipple Crocker (born December 10, 1946) is an American writer and author of the memoir Those Who Remain: Remembrance and Reunion After War, which began as a Pushcart Prize-nominated essay in O-Dark-Thirty.[2][3]
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Biography
Crocker was born in 1946 in Mystic, Connecticut. After attending Mitchell College in New London, Connecticut, she met and married West Point officer David R. Crocker, Jr.[4] When her husband died during the Vietnam War, Crocker went back to school and received a B.S. from the University of Connecticut; an MA in education from Tufts University; and a PhD in nutrition and human development from the University of Connecticut.[5] She received her MFA in creative writing from Bennington College in 2011.[6] Her nonfiction essay "Sam's Way" in The Gettysburg Review was listed as a notable essay of 2012 in Best American Essays 2013.[7]
Crocker was a member of the National Board and National Newsletter Editor of the Gold Star Wives of America.[8] She resides in Mystic, Connecticut, and has one son, Noah Bean.[9]
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