Kate Simon
Kate Simon was a Polish-born American writer.
Life and career
She was born Kaila Grobsmith in Warsaw, Poland to Jewish parents, David, a shoe designer, and Lonia, a corsetiere. Her family brought her to the United States when she was four, where they rejoined her father. Kate was raised in the Bronx, New York, and attended Hunter College where she earned a B.A. Her writing career began as a book reviewer for The New Republic and The Nation magazines. She worked for Book-of-the-Month Club, Publishers Weekly, and as a free-lance editor for Alfred A. Knopf. Against her father's wishes, she switched from vocational school to James Monroe High School. On a vacation at a Yiddish leftist encampment in the Catskills with her mother and siblings, she met the Bergsons, who served as surrogate parents for her and for whose children she served as nanny. She became an English major at Hunter College.Simon became a well-known travel writer. Several of her guides became best sellers. Her autobiography was written in three parts. The first, Bronx Primitive: Portraits in a Childhood was one of The [New York Times]
She was married twice. Her first husband was Dr. Stanley "Steve" Goldman, a deaf endocrinologist whom she had met at Hunter College. Dr. Goldman, as well as Simon's only child, Alexandra "Lexie", and her younger sister, Sylvia, all died of brain tumors. She was divorced from her second husband, Robert Simon, in 1960 after 12-13 years of marriage. Kate Simon was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 1989, and died a year later, aged 77, at her Manhattan home.