

In addition to her published books and magazine columns, many of her stories, as well as essays, appeared in many other magazines and newspapers, including The Saturday Evening Post, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, Nation's Business, Farm Journal, Liberty, Family Circle, Country Home, Collier’s, MacLean’s, This Week, The War Cry, Cape Cod Compass, The New York Sunday News, McCall's, Woman’s Home Companion, Woman’s Day, The Writer, Cosmopolitan (which was a literary magazine in the 1930s and 1940s), Pictorial Review, The American Weekly, The American Magazine, Chatelaine (in Canada), The New England Galaxy, Australian Women’s Weekly, dog magazines, cat magazines and many more. For almost 50 years her work could be found in almost every household in the United States. Gladys Taber was also a prolific short story writer and published several collections of her stories.

Taber and Susan share the same birth day. The other lesser known column was printed in The American Antiques Journal and was entitled “Recipe of the Month, from America’s traditions, selected by Gladys Taber.” These were recipes from her cookbooks, often with a paragraph about the origin, which gives us another aspect of Gladys’ life. Taber was born a day after me, fifty-four years earlier, in Colorado and Mrs. Again Miss Taber, now in her seventies, serves her following well. Vincent Millay’s, rural farm kitchens, those in student housing, etc. by Gladys Taber RELEASE DATE: JJewel-box memoirs by that prolific chronicler of the sunny acres of Stillmeadow, Cape Cods snug harbors, the caprices of small animals, the coziness of bubbling tea kettles, and above the conviviality of good friends and neighbors. It seemed I had given it to her for Christmas one year, and like so many presents we give others, it was the perfect gift for me. Kitchens that were featured included Stillmeadow’s, Still Cove’s, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne’s, Edna St. JanuGladys Taber’s Country Chronicle & Surveillance in the ’70s Stillmeadow I discovered Gladys Taber’s The Stillmeadow Road, a charming book about country life, at my mother’s house. In the Ladies’ Home Journal, she wrote a long-running column of Kitchen Remodels which our members still enjoy today. Gladys Bagg Taber was born on April 12, 1899, in Colorado Springs and spent her. There are two additional columns which Gladys wrote although not every reader of her books today may be aware of them.
