Gertrude Atherton (born Oct. 30, 1857, San Francisco, Calif., U.S.—died June 14, 1948, San Francisco) was an American novelist, noted as an author of fictional biography and history. Atherton’s biography of Nikolay Petrovich Rezanov appeared in the 11th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (see the Britannica Classic: Nicolai Petrovich de Rezánov).
Gertrude Horn grew up in a prosperous neighbourhood of her native San Francisco until her parents’ divorce and thereafter mainly on the San Jose ranch of her maternal grandfather, under whose stern discipline she was introduced to serious literature. She attended St. Mary’s Hall school in Benicia, California, and, for a year, Sayre Institute in Lexington, Kentucky. In February 1876 she eloped with George H.B. Atherton, who had been courting her now twice-divorced mother.
Her life at the Atherton estate, Fair Oaks (now Atherton), California, was an unhappy one dominated by her mother-in-law. Despite her husband’s attempts to stifle her, she managed to write a novel, The Randolphs of Redwoods; based on a local society scandal, its serial publication in the San Francisco Argonaut in 1882, though unsigned, outraged the family. (The novel was published in book form as A Daughter of the Vine in 1899.) The death of her husband in 1887 released her, and she promptly traveled to New York City and thence in 1895 to England and continental Europe. In rapid succession she produced books set in those locales or in old California, and the information she accumulated in her travels lent vividness to her writing. Her work generally drew mixed reviews, with the notable exception of The Conqueror (1902), a novelized account of the life of Alexander Hamilton. Atherton did extensive research for this book, and the result won her critical acclaim and made the book a best-seller. Her controversial novel Black Oxen (1923), the story of a woman revitalized by hormone treatments and based on Atherton’s own experience, was her biggest popular success.
Atherton wrote more than 40 novels in her long career, as well as many nonfiction works. Her work is uneven in quality, perhaps because of the rapidity with which she wrote, but at its best it displays strength and a talent for vivid description. Most of her novels featured strong-willed, independent heroines active in the world at large, and not infrequently their success stemmed from the characters’ frank pursuit of sexual as well as other pleasures. Adventures of a Novelist (1932) was an autobiography, as was in part My San Francisco: A Wayward Biography (1946).