Sneha Girap (Editor)

Alice Grant Rosman

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Name
  
Alice Rosman

Died
  
1961

Role
  
Novelist

Books
  
Benefits received, Truth to Tell

Alice Grant Rosman (18 July 1882 – 20 August 1961) - also known as Alice Trevenen Rosman - was an Australian novelist.

Contents

Writing career

Alice Rosman was born in Kapunda, South Australia. She had one sister called Mary and the two girls attended St Mary's Convent, Franklin Street, Adelaide until 1889. In 1901 she started the Girl's Realm Guide in Adelaide. The Girls' Realm Guild published one of Rosman's books, "The Young Queen".

Rosman published some of her early stories in The Observer and The Chronicle, and began her professional career working on C.J. Dennis's Gadfly in 1906. After this she worked for The Daily Herald and wrote a weekly Adelaide gossip column for The Bulletin from 1908-11.

In 1911 the two Rosman sisters moved to England where Alice worked on the British Australian magazine from 1915-20. She later became assistant editor at the Grand Magazine from 1920-1927.

Rosman published her first novel, Miss Bryde of England in 1915, though it was not met with any success. She continued to publish in the ensuing years but did not receive any degree of recognition until The Window was release in 1926 in both Britain and the United States.

Alice Rosman continued to live in England until her death at Highgate on 20th August 1961.

Novels

  • Miss Bryde of England (1915)
  • The Tower Wall (1916)
  • The Window (1926)
  • The Back Seat Driver (1928)
  • Visitors to Hugo (1929)
  • Jock the Scot (1930)
  • The Young and Secret (1930)
  • The Sixth Journey (1931)
  • Benefits Received (1932)
  • Protecting Margot (1933)
  • Somebody Must (1934)
  • The Sleeping Child (1935)
  • Mother of the Bride (1936)
  • Truth to Tell (1937)
  • Unfamiliar Faces (1938)
  • William's Room (1939)
  • References

    Alice Grant Rosman Wikipedia