Jean Rhys photograph

Jean Rhys

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Gender Female
Death44 years ago
Date of birth August 24,1890
Zodiac sign Virgo
Born Roseau
Date of died May 14,1979
DiedExeter
United Kingdom
SpouseMax Hamer
Leslie Tilden-Smith
Jean Lenglet
Job Novelist
Essayist
Education Stephen Perse Foundation
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
Movies/Shows Quartet
Mr. Bug Goes to Town
Wide Sargasso Sea
Children Maryvonne Moerman
Parents William Rees Williams
Minna Williams
NationalityBritish
Dominican
GenresPostmodernism
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID436944

Good Morning, Midnight
Voyage in the Dark
After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie
Smile please
The collected short stories
Tigers Are Better-Looking
Sleep It Off Lady
Jean Rhys, the Complete Novels
Letters, 1931-1966
Quartet.
Till September Petronella
The Left Bank and Other Stories
The letters of Jean Rhys
Tales of the wide Caribbean
Let them call it jazz and other stories
Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography
Bonjour minuit
Mini Modern Classics La Grosse Fifi
Los Tigres Son Mas Hermosos
Quartet
My Day: 3 Pieces
Irrfahrt im Dunkel. Roman
Quai des Grand Augustins
Modern English Essays, Volume Five
Quartett: Roman
Sagasō muhuda
Everyman's Library; Poetry and the Drama; Palgrave's Golden Treasury
Letters from Gallipoli: New Zealand Soldiers Write Home
Lyric Poetry - Scholar's Choice Edition
The Text of the Mabinogion: And Other Welsh Tales from the Red Book of Hergest - Scholar's Choice Edition
The Masque of the Grail
Literary Pamphlets Chiefly Relating to Poetry from Sidney to Byron
Modern English Essays; Volume Three
A London Rose & Other Rhymes
Wide Sargasso Sea
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Jean Rhys Life story


Jean Rhys, CBE was a British novelist who was born and grew up in the Caribbean island of Dominica. From the age of 16, she mainly resided in England, where she was sent for her education. She is best known for her novel Wide Sargasso Sea, written as a prequel to Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre.

Author who wrote frankly about her life and loves, has died

Feb 16,2020 12:36 am

Diana Athill worked at publishing house Allan Wingate for 50 Years

The writer and editor Diana Athill has died at the age of 101, her publisher has confirmed.

Athill was best known for working with authors including Margaret Atwood , Philip Roth and VS Naipaul.

She was also an author in her own right, releasing accounts of her childhood in Norfolk and life in publishing.

Athill won the Costa biography award at the age of 91, making her the oldest-ever winner in the awards' history.

She picked up The Prize for her 2008 book Somewhere Towards The End, which examined her life in Old Age .

It also won The National Book Critics Circle award.

A young Athill at Oxford University

Her publisher, Granta, said in a statement on Thursday: "Granta is terribly sad to announce the death of Diana Athill Last Night following a short illness. She was 101. "

She wrote about living in a residential home in Alive, Alive Oh! in 2015, comparing it to life at Boarding School .

She "embraced her new home", Granta said, "despite having to give up the required number of books to fit into her room there".

Athill's writing was praised for its honesty, particularly as she wrote frankly about her love life and did not shy away from the subject of sex as an older woman.

Athill was born during an air raid on London in 1917 and went on to study English at Oxford University.

After graduating she worked for the BBC during World War Two, working for the overseas service, before going on to help Andre Deutsch establish his publishing house, Allan Wingate, where she would work for the next 50 Years .

She described being an editor as "a simple thing", in the

Colourful Life

"We would not have published a novel if we couldn't have published it as it came in… Then, I just worked to polish it up a bit. "

The First published material of her own came in 1958, when she turned a story of Mistaken Identity into a piece a fiction.

As soon as she finished the story, she wrote another eight to create a full collection, which was awarded a prize by The Observer .

She first wrote about her own love life in Instead of a Letter, a 1962 memoir, which described a relationship with an RAF pilot which went south while she was at university.

A short novel, Don't Look at Me Like That, came soon after in 1967, but she then stopped writing for another 20 years when she went back to editing full time.

This included working alongside Jean Rhys on Wide Sargasso Sea .

She returned to writing in 1986 with a memoir that explored her relationship with Egyptian novelist Waguih Ghali, who killed himself in Athill's flat in 1968, and also wrote about former partner and activist Hakim Jamal in 1993's Make Believe.

Athill's Colourful Life was also the subject of a BBC documentary, Growing Old Disgracefully, in 2010.

She also once told Desert Island Discs that she was "constantly falling in love, from the age of four, I think!

"With The Garden boy, who had very beautiful brown eyes and he was pumping The Hand pump under the lavatory window and he didn't Look Up and I wanted to meet his eyes so I spat on his head.

"He looked up and our eyes met and I rushed out of the lavatory, scarlet in The Face , with excitement," She Said .

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margaret atwood, publishing

Source of news: bbc.com

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