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Jean S MacLeod

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Occupation
  
Novelist

Genre
  
Romance

Language
  
English

Name
  
Jean MacLeod

Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Writer

Period
  
1936–96


Born
  
Jane Sutherland MacLeod 20 January 1908 Glasgow, Scotland, UK (
1908-01-20
)

Pen name
  
Jean S. MacLeod, Catherine Airlie

Died
  
April 11, 2011, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Books
  
Brief Enchantment, The Valley of Palms

Jean S. MacLeod (20 January 1908 – 11 April 2011) was a prolific British writer of over 130 romance novels from 1936 to 1996, she also used the pseudonym of Catherine Airlie.

Contents

Personal life

Born Jane Sutherland MacLeod on 20 January 1908 in Glasgow, Scotland, the daughter of Elizabeth Allen and John MacLeod. She was actually named Jane, but her grandfather complained it was not Scottish enough, and it was changed to Jean. Her father, who was a civil engineer, moved her family with jobs. Her education began at Bearsden Academy, continued in Swansea and ended in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

She worked in a sweet shop. She moved to North Yorkshire, England to marry with Major Lionel Walton on 1 January 1935, an electricity board executive, who died in 1995. They had a son, David Walton, who died two years before her. She died on 11 April 2011 in Yorkshire, England, at 103 years of age.

Writing career

MacLeod started writing stories for the magazine The People's Friend, before sold her first romance novel in 1936. She wrote contemporary romances, most of them were set in her native Scotland, or in exotic places like Spain or Caribbean, places that she normally visited for documented. From 1948 to 1965, she also published under the pseudonym of Catherine Airlie. She was the first author published in the Mills & Boon Romance Series. In 2009, at 101, MacLeod was interviewed by a Daily Mail reporter, while she was starting her 130th book for Mills & Boon.

MacLeod was member of the Romantic Novelists' Association, where she met the mediatic writer Barbara Cartland, who was not too friendly.

References

Jean S. MacLeod Wikipedia