Alice Hoffman

American author
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Alice Hoffman (born March 16, 1952, New York City, New York, U.S.) is an American novelist whose books about women in search of their identities mix realism and the supernatural.

Hoffman was educated at Adelphi University (B.A., 1973) and Stanford University (M.A., 1975) and began her professional writing career by contributing short stories to magazines. Her first novel, Property Of (1977), which traces the one-year relationship of a suburban girl and a gang leader, is both gritty and romantic. Many of Hoffman’s other novels also deal with complex relationships, such as Angel Landing (1980), a love story set near a nuclear power plant on Long Island, New York; White Horses (1982), which concerns a girl’s struggle to rid herself of incestuous feelings for her elder brother; and Illumination Night (1987), the story of a young couple whose marriage is challenged by a teenage girl.

In At Risk (1988), Hoffman wrote about a young girl with AIDS who sparks varied reactions from her family and community. Seventh Heaven (1990) concerns an unconventional divorcée in a Long Island suburb in 1959–60, and Turtle Moon (1992) contemplates the status of single mothers. Practical Magic (1995; film 1998) is about two sisters trying to leave behind their family’s tradition of witchcraft. The book was the first in a popular series that included the prequels The Rules of Magic (2017) and Magic Lessons (2020) and the sequel The Book of Magic (2021).

Book Jacket of "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" by American children's author illustrator Eric Carle (born 1929)
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Hoffman wrote numerous other books in the 2000s, including The River King (2000; film 2004), about the mystery surrounding a small Massachusetts town after a student drowns in the local river. Blackbird House (2004) describes the many generations of families who have lived in the same Cape Cod farmhouse, and The Ice Queen (2005) details how a woman’s life changes for the better after she is struck by lightning. The Third Angel, which weaves together the stories of three women all hopelessly in love with the wrong men, was published in 2008. In The Dovekeepers (2011; TV miniseries 2015), Hoffman imagined the 1st-century Roman siege of the mountaintop fortress of Masada—where some 1,000 Jews had retreated after the fall of Jerusalem—from the perspectives of four women.

In 2014 Hoffman published The Museum of Extraordinary Things, a tale centring on an early 20th-century New York City boardwalk curiosity show. The Marriage of Opposites (2015) imagines the life of painter Camille Pissarro’s mother, a Creole Jew living on the island of St. Thomas who, following the death of her first husband, scandalizes her community by marrying his nephew. In 2019 Hoffman released The World That We Knew, which is set during World War II.

Hoffman also wrote the children’s book Fireflies (1997) and the teen books Aquamarine (2001; film 2006) and Incantation (2006). She offered coping mechanisms that she had employed during her battle with breast cancer in Survival Lessons (2013). In 1999 she provided the initial endowment for the establishment of the Hoffman Breast Center at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she had received treatment for the disease and later helped to raise additional funds.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.