Rona Jaffe
In her wildly popular 1958 debut novel, The Best of Everything, Rona Jaffe captured the struggle of women working in New York before the women’s liberation movement. Jaffe graduated from Radcliffe College in 1953 and began working as an associate editor at Fawcett Publications. The Best of Everything was turned into a movie starring Joan Crawford in 1959, the year after it was published, and was adapted again as a soap opera in 1970 and as a play in 2012. On the strength of her edgy writing, Jaffe began writing for Cosmopolitan in the 1960s. Over the course of her career, she wrote sixteen novels and one short story collection, Mr. Right is Dead (1965). Her fame peaked again in 1981 when she published Mazes and Monsters, which played into fears that Dungeons & Dragons and other role-playing games (still a novelty at the time) encouraged mental illness and devil-worship. In 1995 she created the Rona Jaffe Foundation to offer grants to enable women writers to break into the field.