Thirteen more excuses to show
book covers in this post, in the form of thirteen more children's authors just
added to my British list in its most recent update. But first out of the gate,
as promised, is an author who, though she is indeed included on the list
because of her children's fiction, is probably more of interest to most readers
for her other work, including guides to cooking, homemaking, and entertaining,
as well as, most intriguingly, humorous memoirs in various offbeat settings.
ETHELIND FEARON's
humorous guide The Reluctant Hostess
(1954) was actually reprinted by Penguin in 2015, and I'll bet it, and other of
her non-fiction, is entertaining enough.
But what immediately caught my eye
(admittedly in part because of enticing cover art) were her humorous memoirs. The Fig and the Fishbone (1959) tells of
her experiences opening a tearoom in a 600-year-old Essex cottage, The Marquis, the Mayonaisse and Me
(1961) tells of her life on an Essex farm, and A Privy in the Cactus (1965), deals with her renovations of a
decrepit house in Majorca. Others include Most
Happy Husbandman (1946, aka The
Happiest of Men) and Me and Mr
Mountjoy (1951), as well a couple of volumes that seem to be more
straightforward humor titles, such as How
to Keep Pace with Your Daughter (1958) and Without My Yacht: How to Be at Home in the South of France (1959).
Fearon's children's titles
include The Sheep-Dog Adventure
(1953), The Young Market Gardeners
(1953), The Secret of the Château (1955),
and Pluckrose's Horse (1955), and may
be completely delightful as well, for all I know, but it's the memoirs I'll be
keeping an eye out for. Sadie Stein wrote an enthusiastic article about Fearon
for the Paris Review following the Penguin reprint, which can be read here.
Newly added, too, are not
one, not two, not three, but four more "horsy" authors, only one of
which, strangely, can be definitely identified. CATHERINE ANNE HARRIS, who wrote seven books described in more
detail here,
may well be the Catherine A. Harris born 1936 in Worcestershire, which fits
with reviews of her first book which state she was only 18 at the time, but we
can't find anything to definitely prove it and the name is not unique enough to
narrow the odds.
Not even a tentative ID of VERONICA WESTLAKE, possibly a pseudonym
for an unknown author, who wrote four books with pony content—The Ten-Pound Pony (1953), The Intruders (1954), The Unwilling Adventurers (1955), and The Mug's Game (1956). Jane Badger Books
wrote about them here,
and Pony Mad Book Lovers discussed them here.
And nothing to identify SYLVIA SCOTT WHITE, whose two pony
stories—Ten-Week Stables (1960) and
its sequel, Pony Pageant (1965)—are
discussed here.
Too-common names and limited output have so far made it impossible to trace
her.
But there's plenty of
information about PAT SMYTHE, author
of a dozen or so children's titles but better known as a champion showjumper
herself.
Smythe began her writing career with memoirs of her showjumping
adventures, Jump for Joy (1954) and One Jump Ahead (1956), the latter of
which includes her experiences in the 1956 Stockholm Olympics.
In 1957, Jacqueline Rides for a Fall initiated
her "Three Jays" series of children's horse stories, in which she
portrayed a semi-autobiographical version of herself alongside fictional
characters and in fictional adventures. Six more titles in that series
followed. She later published three more children's books—A Swiss Adventure (1970), A
Spanish Adventure (1971), and A
Cotswold Adventure (1973)—and published her autobiography, Leaping Life's Fences (1992).
JOYCE LAURIE RALLINGS, better known as J. L. Rallings, published three
children's adventure stories—Brown Valley
Adventure (1959), Smuggler's Creek
(1960), and The Secret Tarn (1962). Details
about her are sparse, but we did happen to learn that, as of 1947, she was
working as a midwife.
We could trace even less
about CATHERINE SCALES, but the
cover art of her two children's books—Gay
Company (1938), about a cat and his friend, and Nugger Nonsense (1939), about dachsunds travelling in Europe—is
charming enough.
Three new additions to the
list particularly utilized their times spent living in foreign locales when
writing their books. EDITH E. CUTHELL
lived for many years in India, and frequently set her books there. Most of her
fiction appeared in the 1890s, including the children's books Indian Pets and Playmates (1891), Only a Guard-Room Dog (1892), and In the Mutiny Days (1893) and her novels
A Baireuth Pilgrimage (1894), Caught by a Cook (1895), and Sweet Irish Eyes (1897). Two additional
children's titles, however—Reggy, Queenie
and Blot and The Skipper—appeared
in 1920, qualifying her for this list. She also published several biographies
in the 1910s.
JANE H. SPETTIGUE was born in Cornwall, but she apparently spent much of her later life
in South Africa, as reflected in her fiction. Titles include The Gregors: A Cornish Story (1878), Jephthah's Daughter (1885), An Africander Trio (1897), An Unappreciative Aunt (1898), A Pair of Them (1899), A Trek and a Laager: A Borderland Story
(1900), A Housekeeping Start in
Johannesburg (1904), and Nero, an
African Mongrel (1920).
And MARION PERCY WILLIAMS, who wrote as M. P. Williams, only began
publishing after her return to England, but her first book, Nigerian Holiday (1959), reveals where
she had lived for a number of years. A 1954 passenger list shows her arriving
in the U.K. from a previous home in Nigeria, planning to settle in Belfast with
her missionary husband. She later lived in Swansea.
ETHEL LOUISA WESTMARLAND wrote around 20 children's books under her two
pseudonyms, Christine Courtney and Ellen Elliott. Titles include Quartette at Barnham Corners (1951), Gordons at Gullcliff (1953), The Dresden Shepherdess (1960), and Jane and the Pink Flamingo (1963), as
well as three books about a heroine named Susan. Presumably (but not certainly)
she was the same Ellen Elliott who published several romance novels in the late
1960s and early 1970s, including Hong
Kong Nurse (1968) and High Flight
Nurse (1970).
According to the British
Library catalogue, GLYNN MILLS is
the pseudonym of one Myra Illingworth. This seems to be the only source for
that name, and if it's correct she might be the Myra Illingworth born 25 July
1914, died 9 Oct 1981, but there's nothing to definitely link that person to
the author. 11 volume of fiction appeared under the Mills name. Her debut, Never Alone (1954), seems to have been
marketed to adults, though I can't find any details about it, but her other
books all seem to be for younger readers. Titles include Alison of Noggarth Hall (1956), They
Came to Camp (1956), Christmas at
Lynton Hall (1958), Danger at Calham
Cove (1959), Marilyn Investigates
(1961), and According to Plan (1963).
Although the name K. N.
Nelson on a single book—The Camp at Sea
View Meadow (1929), subtitled "A Girl Guide Story"—wasn't a lot
to go on, John Herrington was able to identify her as KATE NELSON ABBOTT, who in 1911 was working as an insurance clerk.
Sadly, the reason for her limited output seems to have been that she died in
Surrey, aged 56, not long after her book appeared.
That's it for this post. The
third and final post about new children's author will be coming soon, and will
include several authors who focused on Scotland, a tempting WWI girls' story,
and the author of a series about a "hag"…
Gosh, Scott, what a hugey heap of books. As a girl, I occasionally got my hands on English girls' stories, especially girls horse stories, but never enough. What riches I missed.
ReplyDeleteI always look forward to your posts, and this one does not disappoint. I marvel at the obscure authors and books you are able to find. So fun to learn about them and to keep a look out for on the many estate sale and old book store jaunts I take. :-)
ReplyDeleteLOVE that cover art. NOW - I wonder if I could ever track down any of Ethelind Fearon's books - those look delicious!
ReplyDeleteTom
Love the cover art, and would certainly like to find this collection on a shelf to look through and pick out the gems. But REALLY looking forward to the ones set in Scotland next time.
ReplyDeleteJerri