A slew of new writers (well,
16 anyway—I've never been sure exactly how many constitutes a "slew"). Several of these writers were best known for
works of fantasy or works that incorporate supernatural elements, and I have to
give credit where it's due, because some of these writers were actually brought
to my attention by two helpful readers, one really interesting reference work,
and a publishing house I don't know how I'd missed until now.
Julia, who has already made
many other suggestions that have already been added to the list, emailed me a
while back and mentioned two more, Jessie Douglas Kerruish and Maryon
Urquhart. John at Pretty
Sinister did a fascinating review of Kerruish's The Undying Monster (1922) a while back, and Urquhart's The Island of Souls (1910) has been
described as: "A fully developed Edwardian novel about high magic in
contemporary England, and the struggle between forces of good and evil for the
soul of a young girl." Both sound
fascinating, so thanks again, Julia!
Still from the film version of "The Undying Monster" |
And another kind reader,
Tina, has provided me with wonderful lists of the authors included in several
anthologies she has from the 1930s.
These have been great fun to look over, and have led me to five new
authors for my list. Christine
Campbell Thomson, Kathleen Warren, and Pansy
Pakenham were included in Tina's lists, but Pansy turned out to be a
triple score, because in addition to being a novelist herself, she happens to
have had two sisters who also qualify for the list. I do love these literary families!
Pansy Lamb (née Pakenham) with her daughters |
Violet Powell (née Pakenham) with husband, novelist Anthony Powell |
MARY PAKENHAM's
Christmas
with the Savages (1955),
described as a novel that makes autobiographical use of the Pakenhams' large
family gatherings, sounds irresistible.
And I'm stretching the boundaries of my list for Violet
Pakenham, since only one of her memoirs (barely) fits my time
period, but the fact that she was also the biographer (under her married name,
Violet Powell) of the likes of Margaret Kennedy and E. M. Delafield made her a
very worthy exception (not to mention that the "Powell" comes from
her hubby, novelist Anthony Powell). The
Pakenham sisters seem interesting in their own right, so I may be revisiting
them in future posts So,
thanks again for your help, Tina!
Mary Pakenham (later Clive) |
I recently came across a useful 2008 reference book called Women
in Science Fiction and Fantasy, by Robin Anne Reid, which provides an
excellent survey of women's writing in those genres going all the way back to
the medieval period. Naturally, the
chapters focused on 1900-1959 were right up my alley, and several of the names
below derive from there. (At some point,
I'm going to post a bibliography of useful reference works I've found and ask
for you brilliant readers' suggestions of others, and Reid's book will belong
on that list when it finally comes about…)
For example, SUSAN ALICE KERBY's 1945 novel, Miss Carter and the Ifrit, in which, according to Reid, "a
spinster learns to enjoy life with the help of a genie," sounds
irresistible. And, though she's already
on my list, I had never given much thought to Mary Norton's The Magic Bed-Knob (1943) until Reid
noted that it's about "a spinster learning how to become a witch,"
which triggered thoughts of Lolly
Willowes and bumped it up my "to read" list.
Original cover, now reprinted by Sundial |
And finally, how have I never
stumbled across Sundial
Press until now? According to their
website, they've been around for eight years, so I have obviously been
oblivious. A search for Phyllis
Paul led me to them, because they've reprinted her 1957 novel A Cage for the Nightingale, and they compare
it to Henry James's The Turn of the Screw,
one of my ambivalent favorites (I hate it, but I love it, if you know what I
mean). While I was there, Sundial's
website introduced me to Phillippa Powys, sister of the
better-known John Cowper Powys. Her
fiction, including the one novel published in her lifetime, The Blackthorn Winter (1930), sounds
bleak but interesting, and I also learned that one of the torments in her
tormented life was having been infatuated with Valentine Ackland before Sylvia
Townsend Warner came along and lived not-entirely-happily but certainly ever
after with Ackland. Undoubtedly some
drama there if we were to dig a bit deeper…
Portrait of Phillipa Powys, by Gertrude Powys |
By the way, Sundial has issued
some other intriguing reprints as well, including several by authors already on
my list. They've published a compilation
of Rosemary Timperley's ghost stories and next spring will (bless their hearts)
reprint F. M. Mayor's impossible-to-find story collection The Room Opposite (1935), which contains several ghost stories and
has been on my wish list for a while.
They've also published new collections of stories by Elizabeth Myers and
Malachi Whitaker, both writers I've meant to read but haven't yet. I've added Sundial to my "Sympatico
Sites" and will be watching them closely to see what they'll do next!
Below is the whole list of
new authors, all of which have been added to the main
list. I hope you find them
interesting!
JANE GASKELL (1941- )
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Fantasy
writer best known for Strange Evil
(1957), written when she was only 14, which deals with a war between fairies;
a later series deals with residents of Atlantis fleeing to Egypt; other
titles include King's Daughter
(1958), All Neat in Black Stockings
(1968), and Summer Coming (1972).
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SUSAN ALICE KERBY (1908-????)
(pseudonym of Alice Elizabeth Burton, married name
Aitken)
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Known for popular histories
of life in various periods of British history, Kerby also wrote six earlier
novels, including Miss Carter and the
Ifrit (1945), an intriguing fantasy about a spinster and a genie, and Mr. Kronion (1949), about a Greek god
defending English village life.
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JESSIE DOUGLAS KERRUISH (1884-1949)
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Author of The Undying Monster (1922), about a
family cursed by an unknown creature, for short fiction collected in Babylonian Nights' Entertainments
(1934), and for her two earlier adventure novels, Miss Haroun al-Raschid (1917) and The Girl from Kurdistan (1918).
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HILDA LEWIS (1896-1974)
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Historical novelist and
children's author best known for The
Ship That Flew (1939), about a toy ship that travels in time; her novels
for adults include Said Dr. Spendlove
(1940), about the Crippen case, Imogen
Under Glass (1943), Wife to Henry V
(1954), and The Witch and the Priest
(1956).
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MARJORIE [PROUT]
(aka Mark Vinton)
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Fantasy
author known for her Karmic Destiny sequence—Island Sonata (1944), Muted
Strings (1946) and Delphic Echo
(1948)—which deals with Atlantis and reincarnation; other titles include The Future of Mr. Purdew (1936), A Market for Idols (1939), and Moloch (1942).
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DOROTHY MACARDLE
(1899-1958)
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Best
known for her much-cited history The
Irish Republic (1937), Macardle also wrote numerous plays for Dublin’s
Abbey Theatre, as well as four novels, most famously Uneasy Freehold (1941, aka The
Uninvited), a romantic Gothic, and Dark
Enchantment (1953), about an accused witch.
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MARY
PAKENHAM (1907-2010)
(married
name Clive, aka Hans Duffy)
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Sister
of Pansy and Violet below, Pakenham published four pseudonymous novels in the
1930s—In England Now (1932), Seven by Seven (1933), Lucasta's Wedding (1936), and Under the Sugar-Plum Tree (1937)—and
the acclaimed autobiographical novel, Christmas
with the Savages (1955).
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PANSY PAKENHAM (1904-1999)
(married name Lamb)
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Wife of painter Henry Lamb;
biographer of Charles I (1936), translator, and author of two novels, The Old Expedient (1928), described as
an “original and intriguing fantasy” set in London and on an Irish island,
and August (1931), called “a brief
but searching Odyssey among the intelligentsia.”
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VIOLET
PAKENHAM (1912-2002)
(married
name Powell, aka Violet Powell)
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Wife of novelist Anthony
Powell; memoirist and biographer, her three volumes of acclaimed memoirs
begin with Five Out of Six (1960),
but she is likely better known for her biographies of Somerville & Ross
(1970), Margaret Kennedy (1983), and E. M. Delafield (1988).
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PHYLLIS PAUL (1903-1973)
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Author of eleven
well-received novels from the 1930s-1960s, some dealing with supernatural
themes; titles include We Are Spoiled
(1933), The Children Triumphant (1934),
Constancy (1951), and A Cage for the Nightingale (1957),
which has been compared to The Turn of
the Screw.
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PHILIPPA POWYS (1886-1963)
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Sister of novelists John
Cowper and Theodore Francis, Powys wrote dark fiction about rural life but
published only one novel in her lifetime, The
Blackthorn Winter (1930); two more unpublished novellas, The Tragedy of Budvale and Sorrel Barn, were first published by Sundial
Press in 2011.
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ELLA M[ARY]. SCRYMSOUR (1888-1962)
(full name Ella Scrymsour-Nichol, née Robertson)
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Novelist who had triggered considerable
research long before I came across her, best known for the
supernatural/sci-fi thriller The
Perfect World (1922) and for subsequent potboilers; the stories in Shiela Crerar, Psychic Investigator,
only compiled in 2006, may also be of interest.
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CHRISTINE CAMPBELL
THOMSON (1897–1985)
(married names Cook and
Hartley, aka Flavia Richardson)
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Best known for popular
anthologies of horror fiction in the 1920s and 1930s, beginning with Not at Night (1925), Thomson also
published short fiction of her own and several novels, including Bourgoyne of Goyce (1921), The Incredible Island (1924), and In a Far Corner (1926).
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M[ARYON]. URQUHART (dates unknown)
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Author of six novels from
1905-1910, some focused on the supernatural—most famously The Island of Souls (1910), about
"high magic in contemporary England" and "psychic vampirism";
others include Our Lady of the Mists
(1907) and The Fool of Faery
(1910).
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ELIZABETH WALTER (1930s-2006)
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An acclaimed writer of
novels and stories of ghosts and the supernatural, Walter is on the very edge
of my time frame, with her first novel, The
More Deceived, appearing in 1960; her ghost stories appear in collections
like Snowfall (1965), The Sin Eater (1967), and In the Mist (1979).
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KATHLEEN WARREN (dates unknown)
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More research needed;
author of at least three novels published by Faber in the 1950s—The Locked Gates (1950), Intruder in the House (1951), and The Long Fidelity (1952)—but details
about these or other titles are sketchy.
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I loved the Violet Powell biography of The Prov Lady. Well worth reading.
ReplyDeleteOh, good to know, Nicola. I'm going to have to check it out!
DeleteI've just ordered Christmas with the Savages. What an extraordinary family!
ReplyDeleteI can see your site is going to have an appalling effect on my purse.
Well, if it makes you feel better, I've been blowing my book budget lately too! I have Christmas with the Savages on the top shelf of my "to read" bookcase. I almost started it last week, but wondered if I should wait for Christmas to come around again. In any case, let me know what you think!
Delete