Sneha Girap (Editor)

Josephine Bell

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Full Name
  
Doris Collier

Nationality
  
British


Name
  
Josephine Bell

Role
  
Writer


Born
  
8 December 1897 (
1897-12-08
)
Manchester, England

Spouse(s)
  
Norman Ball (1923–????)

Died
  
1987, England, United Kingdom

Education
  
Newnham College, Cambridge, Godolphin School

Books
  
The Port of London Murders, The Summer School M, A flat tyre in Fulham, The upfold witch, Death in Clairvoyance

Josephine Bell, pseudonym of Doris Bell Collier, (8 December 1897 – 24 April 1987), was an English physician and writer. Bell wrote nineteen novels and forty-five mystery novels in her lifetime, as well as radio plays, short stories, and series for women's magazines.

Life

Bell was born in Manchester, England in 1897 and studied at Godolphin School between 1910 and 1916. She then trained at Newnham College, Cambridge until 1919. At the University College Hospital in London she was granted M.R.C.S. and L.R.C.P. in 1922, and a M.B. B.S. in 1924.

In 1923, she married Dr. Norman Dyer Ball, and the couple had a son and three daughters. From 1927 until 1935 the couple practiced medicine in Greenwich and London. When her husband died, Bell moved to Guildford, Surrey. From 1954 through 1962 she was a member of the management committee of St. Luke's Hospital.

Bell began to write detective novels beginning in 1936 under her pen name. Many of her works used a medical background and featured the fictional character Dr. David Wintringham, who worked at Research Hospital in London as a junior assistant physician.

In 1953, Bell helped found the Crime Writers' Association and served as chair from 1959 to 1960.

References

Josephine Bell Wikipedia