| 
PAMELA ARUNDALE (1919-     ) | 
  | 
 | 
Apparently the author of a single novel, Bread and Olives: A Light-Hearted Tale of
  a Mediterranean Island (1957), which sounds distinctly entertaining, and
  whose main character The Spectator
  compared to Aunt Dot from Rose Macaulay's The
  Towers of Trebizond. 
 | 
  | 
GILLIAN AVERY
  (1926-     ) 
(married name Cockshut) | 
  | 
 | 
Children's
  author whose works are known for their realism and their Victorian settings;
  her best-known novels include The
  Warden's Niece (1957) and The
  Elephant War (1960), both set in Oxford, The Greatest Gresham (1962), and A Likely Lad (1971). 
 | 
  | 
MARGARET J[OYCE]. BAKER
  (1918-     ) | 
  | 
 | 
Children's
  author whose works are often set in Somerset
  and North Devon; titles include "Nonsense!" Said the Tortoise
  (1949), Four Farthings and a Thimble
  (1950), The Bright High Flyer
  (1957), Castaway Christmas (1963),
  and Cut Off from Crumpets (1964). 
 | 
  | 
MARGARET
  BIGGS (1929-     ) | 
  | 
 | 
Children's author best known for her
  Melling School series, many of which have been reprinted by Girls Gone By,
  starting with The Blakes Come to
  Melling (1951) and The New Prefect
  at Melling (1952); others include Dilly
  Goes to Ambergate (1955) and The
  Two Families (1958). 
 | 
  | 
JULIA BIRLEY (1928-     ) 
(née Davies) | 
  | 
 | 
Daughter
  of Margaret Kennedy and author of four novels—The Children on the Shore (1958), The Time of the Cuckoo (1960), When You Were There (1963), and A Serpent's Egg (1966). 
 | 
  | 
JEAN BLATHWAYT
  (1918-     ) 
A
  nurse and nursery school teacher as well as author, Blathwayt published more
  than a dozen books for children, including Uncle Paul's House (1957), The
  Well Cabin (1957), Jenny Leads the
  Way (1958), The Beach People
  (1960), Peter's Adventure (1961),
  and House of Shadows (1967). 
 | 
  | 
PATRICIA CALDWELL
  (1933-     ) 
(married name Turner) | 
  | 
 | 
Author of girls' school
  novels, Caldwell
  published two books in the 1950s—Prefects
  at Vivians (1956) and Head Girl at
  Vivians (1957)—and has more recently written four more volumes being
  reprinted by Girls Gone By, starting with Strangers
  at Vivians (2011). 
 | 
  | 
SUSAN [ELSPETH] CHITTY (1929-    
  ) 
(pseudonym of
  Susan Hinde, née Glossop) | 
  | 
 | 
Daughter of Antonia White; biographer and
  author of three novels—The Diary of a
  Fashion Model (1958), White
  Huntress (1963), and My Life &
  Horses (1966); her biographies include The Woman Who Wrote Black Beauty (1971) and a biography of Edward
  Lear (1989). 
 | 
  | 
PAULINE CLARKE
  (1921-     ) 
(married name Blair, aka
  Helen Clare) 
Children’s author known for The Pekinese Princess (1948), a fairy tale set in a kingdom ruled
  by dogs, The Boy with the Erpingham
  Hood (1956), set before the battle of Agincourt, and The Twelve and the Genii (1962), based on childhood writings by
  Branwell and Charlotte Brontë. 
 
|  |  | Isabel Colegate |  
 | 
  | 
ISABEL COLEGATE (1931-    ) 
(married
  name Briggs) | 
  | 
 | 
Best known for The Shooting
  Party (1981), an acclaimed novel set at an aristocratic weekend shooting
  party just before the outbreak of World War I, Colegate's other novels
  include The Blackmailer (1958), The Great Occasion (1962), and the
  Orlando trilogy (1968-1973). 
 | 
  | 
HELEN
  EDMISTON (1913-????)  
(aka
  Helen Robertson) | 
  | 
 | 
More research needed; author of four
  mystery novels—The Winged Witnesses
  (1955), Venice of the Black Sea
  (1956), The Crystal-Gazers (1957),
  and the most acclaimed, The Chinese
  Goose (1960, aka Swan Song),
  and one additional novel, The Shake-Up
  (1962). 
 | 
  | 
PENELOPE FARMER (1939-     ) 
(married names Mockridge and Shorvon) | 
  | 
 | 
Children's writer and
  novelist whose career began with The
  China People (1960), a collection of fairy tales, Farmer is perhaps best
  known for Charlotte Sometimes (1969),
  the story of a girl who travels back in time to 1918; since the 1980s Farmer
  has also published several novels for adults. 
 
|  |  | Gillian Freeman |  
 | 
  | 
GILLIAN FREEMAN
  (1929-     ) 
(married name Thorpe, aka
  Eliot George) | 
  | 
 | 
Critic and novelist, whose
  works include Fall of Innocence (1956), The Leather Boys (1961), about a gay
  relationship, a study of pornography, The Undergrowth of Literature
  (1967), and a critical study of the work of Angela Brazil (1976). 
 | 
  | 
JANE GASKELL (1941-    ) | 
  | 
 | 
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). 
 | 
  | 
MARY KELLY (1927-     ) 
(née
  Coolican) | 
  | 
 | 
Author of 10 acclaimed mystery novels,
  including A Cold Coming (1956), Dead Man's Riddle (1957), The Spoilt Kill (1961, reprinted by
  Virago), March to the Gallows
  (1964), and Dead Corse (1966);
  Kelly stopped publishing after 1974's That
  Girl in the Alley. 
 | 
  | 
ORIEL MALET (1923-     ) 
(pseudonym of Auriel
  Rosemary Malet Vaughan) | 
  | 
 | 
Novelist best known for Marjory Fleming (1946, reprinted by
  Persephone), about the famous child poet, Malet's other works include Trust
  in the Springtime (1943), My
  Bird Sings (1946), and the children's novel Beginner's Luck
  (1953). 
 | 
  | 
WINIFRED [LANGFORD] MANTLE
  (1911-????) 
(aka Anne Fellowes, aka Frances
  Lang, aka Jane Langford) | 
  | 
 | 
Author of numerous historical
  and romantic novels from the 1950s to the early 1980s, including Happy Is the House (1951), The Secret Fairing (1956), A Pride of Princesses (1961), The Leaping Lords (1963), The River Runs (1964), and children's
  books including Tinker's Castle
  (1963). 
 | 
  | 
MARGARET J[ESSY] MILLER (1911-????) 
(married name Dale) | 
  | 
 | 
Possibly (but not likely to be) the same as Margaret Dale above;
  children's author whose works often focused on Scotland; titles include Seven Men of Wit (1960), The Queen's Music (1961), Gunpowder Treason (1968), Plot for the Queen (1969), and The Far Castles (1978). 
 | 
  | 
JENNY NICHOLSON (1919-????) | 
  | 
 | 
Author of Kiss the Girls Goodbye: On Life in the
  Women's Services (1944), a useful resource regarding women's roles during
  World War II; she later co-wrote what appears to be a travel book about the Soviet Union, The
  Sickle and the Stars (1948). 
 
|  |  | Edna O'Brien |  
 | 
  | 
EDNA O'BRIEN (1930-     ) 
(married name Gebler) | 
  | 
 | 
Acclaimed Irish novelist,
  dramatist, screenwriter, and biographer, best known for her Country Girls trilogy—The Country Girls (1960), The Lonely Girl (1962), and Girls in Their Married Bliss (1964) and
  numerous other novels; O'Brien published a memoir, Country Girl, in 2012. 
 | 
  | 
KATHLEEN O’FARRELL
  (1924-     ) 
Children's author most active in the 1950s and
  1960s; her titles include Polly of Primrose
  Hill (1956), All Because of Posy
  (1957), The Camerons Lead the Way
  (1957), Aunt Biddy Began It (1960),
  Number One, Victoria Terrace
  (1962), and Sally Anne Sees It Through
  (1967). 
 | 
  | 
H[AZEL]. M[ARY]. PEEL
  (1930-     ) 
(aka Wallis Peel) | 
  | 
 | 
Author
  of horse stories for older children and adults, beginning with Fury, Son of the Wilds (1959), some of
  which have been reprinted by Fidra; others include Pilot the Hunter (1962) and Jago
  (1966); in recent years, Peel has written fantasy novels under her pseudonym. 
 
 
|  |  | K. M. Peyton |  
 | 
  | 
K. M. PEYTON (1929-     ) 
(pseudonym of Kathleen
  Wendy Herald Peyton, née Herald, aka Kathleen Herald) (children's) | 
  | 
 | 
Children’s
  author whose first book, Sabre, the
  Horse from the Sea (1947), appeared when she was 18; best known for the
  Flambards series, beginning with Flambards
  (1967), set in a crumbling manor house in the early 20th century;
  several of Peyton’s titles have been reprinted by Fidra. 
 | 
  | 
DIANA PULLEIN-THOMPSON (1925-     ) 
(married name Farr) | 
  | 
 | 
Children's author who, like
  her sisters Christine and Josephine, focused on horse stories such as I Wanted A Pony (1946), Three Ponies and Shannan (1947), Janet Must Ride (1953), The Boy Who Came To Stay (1960), and Ponies In The Valley (1976). 
 
| +and+Diana+(r).jpg) |  | Josephine (l) and Diana (r) Pullein-Thompson |  
 | 
  | 
JOSEPHINE PULLEIN-THOMPSON (1924-     ) 
(aka Josephine Mann) | 
  | 
 | 
Sister of Christine and
  Diana and also an author of children's horse stories; her titles include Six Ponies (1946), I Had Two Ponies (1947), Prince Among Ponies (1952), Show Jumping Secret (1955), The Trick Jumpers (1958), Fear Treks The Moor (1978), and Ride To The Rescue (1979). 
 | 
  | 
RONA RANDALL (1911-????) 
(pseudonym of Rona Shambrook, née
  Green, aka Virginia Standage) | 
  | 
 | 
Prolific author of hospital romance, gothic fiction, and historical
  romance from the 1940s-1980s; titles include The Moon Returns (1942), The
  Late Mrs. Lane (1945), Delayed
  Harvest (1950), Young Sir Galahad
  (1953), The Cedar Tree (1957), Knight's Keep (1967), and Dragonmede (1974). 
 | 
  | 
KATHARINE SIM (1913-????) 
(née Thomasset) | 
  | 
 | 
Biographer, travel writer
  and novelist, known for her advanced knowledge of Malaya
  and extensive travel to other regions, also reflected in some of her fiction;
  novels include Malacca Boy (1957), The Moon at My Feet (1958), Black Rice (1959), and The Jungle Ends Here (1960). 
 
|  |  | Emma Smith in 2013 |  
 | 
  | 
EMMA SMITH (1923-     ) 
(pseudonym of Elspeth
  Hallsmith, married name Stewart-Jones) | 
  | 
 | 
Best known for her novel The Far Cry (1949, reprinted by
  Persephone), Smith also wrote Maidens'
  Trip (1948, reprinted by Bloomsbury), a memoir of working on the canals
  in World War II, and a late novel, The
  Opportunity of a Lifetime (1978). 
 | 
  | 
SHELLEY SMITH (1912-????)  
(pseudonym of Nancy Hermione Bodington,
  née Courlander) | 
  | 
 | 
Successful author of psychological mysteries; titles include Death Stalks a Lady (1945), Come and Be Killed! (1946), Man Alone (1952, aka The Crooked Man), The Party at No. 5 (1954), and The Lord Have Mercy (1956, aka The Shrew Is Dead). 
 | 
  | 
JOAN K[????]. SNELLING
  (?1926-????) 
(?married names Catlett
  and Kite?) 
More research needed; author of three novels in
  the 1940s (the first written during the Blitz when she was only 14)—Queen by Proxy (1942), described by
  one reviewer as "unbelievably nonsensical," The Cruise of the Carrier Dove (1946), and Morning Waits (1947), set during Queen Anne's reign. 
 | 
  | 
SYLVIA THORPE
  (1926-      ) 
(pseudonym of June Sylvia
  Thimblethorpe) 
Popular and prolific author of historical romances
  from the 1950s to 1980s, including those set in Regency, Georgian and other
  periods; titles include Beggar on
  Horseback (1953), Rogues' Covenant
  (1957), The Highwayman (1962), Fair Shine the Day (1964), and The Scarlet Domino (1970). 
 | 
  | 
FRANCES TURK (1915-????) | 
  | 
 | 
Prolific popular author of
  light romantic novels, including the wartime Candle Corner (1943), about a pilot recovering from injuries on a
  farm, and The Five Grey Geese
  (1944), about Land Girls; others include Ancestors
  (1947), Salutation (1949), and Dinny Lightfoot (1956). 
 | 
  | 
ESTHER TERRY WRIGHT (1913-????) | 
  | 
 | 
Diarist and author of two
  novels; best known for Pilot's Wife's
  Tale (1942), about her attempts to maintain a domestic life with her
  pilot husband during World War II, and his recovery from injuries in the
  Battle of Britain; her novels are The
  Prophet Bird (1958) and A Vacant
  Chair (1979). | 
 
What an interesting list, thank you. Was going to offer Cynthia Harnett, but she was a Victorian baby.....
ReplyDeleteThanks, Gillie! Yes, sadly it looks like Cynthia Harnett died way back in 1981 (though at the fairly impressive age of 88!). But thank you for reminding me of her, as I do think her historical novels sound interesting. More to read!
DeleteThanks for this information, Scott. Glad to see so many are still around and, I hope, still with it.
ReplyDeleteWell, the Emma Smith and K. M. Peyton photos are from recent interviews, so they are certainly with it still--in fact, Peyton looks more fit than I feel on some days, and sounded like a high-energy and very interesting person. I hope I am as with it even in 10 or 20 years, let alone at age 80+!
DeleteHow nice to see who is still with us. Gillian Avery is also known for her books on the real-life world of Girls Own, including a history of my own Alma Mater: Cheltenham Ladies, An illustrated history of the Cheltenham Ladies' College (London: James and James Ltd, 2003).
ReplyDeleteI picked Margaret Biggs' The Two Families off my shelf last night and am much enjoying it.
Oh, how interesting. How did I miss Avery's other books? I will have to look into them more fully. Cheltenham Ladies actually sounds like it could be great background for my girls' school reading. I just started Antonia Forest's Autumn Term and became quite addicted!
DeleteI still regard Antonia Forest as one of the best GO writers. Gillian's book "Best Type of Girl: History of Girls' Independent Schools" would give you a wider view of girls' education as a background - and it's cheaper.
DeleteI give a talk to womens' groups called "'Pull your socks up Angela!' - the English Schoolgirl in Fact and Fiction". It's astonishing how much overlap there is. Though sadly we never had the sort of adventures that these schoolgirl heroines enjoy!
Our library has Best Type of Girl, so it's on my "to read" list and I may have to get it soon. Somehow, last night I ended up online reading a bit about Cheltenham. You have some impressive fellow alums, including a fair number from my list!
DeleteOh yes! :-)
DeleteEmma Smith also wrote "As Green as Grass" one of the best books I read last year.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I don't know how I missed that one. It looks like great fun. Another book for the "to read" list!
Delete