Marion L. Starkey


Marion Lena Starkey was an American author of history books, including The Devil in Massachusetts: A Modern Enquiry into the Salem Witch Trials.

Career

After working as a newspaper editor for the Saugus Herald and teaching at the Hampton Institute and at the University of Connecticut at New London, she became a full-time writer. She began writing as a child, but did not take up writing full-time for many years. Her books include: The Tall Man from Boston,, Cherokee Nation, , Land Where Our Fathers Died, Striving to Make It My Home, Congregational Way and .

The Devil in Massachusetts

Motivated in part by the question of how the Holocaust could have happened, Starkey delved into the Salem archives to explore the underpinnings of an earlier, American tragedy: the Salem Witch Trials. Working from court records, she created a psychological portrait tracing the development of the event from child fantasies to societal hysteria, eventually publishing in 1949 The Devil in Massachusetts: A Modern Enquiry Into the Salem Witch Trials. Arthur Miller is said to have used this work in his research for The Crucible.