Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Lucilla Andrews

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Occupation
  
Nurse, novelist

Genre
  
Romance

Language
  
English

Name
  
Lucilla Andrews

Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Writer

Period
  
1954–1996


Lucilla Andrews dgrassetscomauthors1245013288p5281049jpg

Born
  
Lucilla Matthew Andrews November 20, 1919 Suez, Egypt (
1919-11-20
)

Pen name
  
Lucilla Andrews, Diana Gordon, Joanna Marcus

Died
  
November 6, 2006, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Books
  
No Time for Romance, The Sinister Side, The secret armour, Nurse Errant, My friend the professor

Lucilla Matthew Andrews Crichton (born 20 November 1919 in Suez, Egypt – d. 3 October 2006 in Edinburgh, Scotland) was a British writer of 33 romance novels from 1954 to 1996, she signed as Lucilla Andrews specialised in hospital romances, and under the pen names Diana Gordon and Joanna Marcus published her first mystery romances.

Contents

She was a founding member of the Romantic Novelists' Association, which honoured her shortly before her death with a lifetime achievement award.

Biography

Born Lucilla Matthew Andrews on 20 November 1919 in Suez, Egypt, the third of four children of William Henry Andrews and Lucilla Quero-Bejar. They met in Gibraltar, and married in 1913. Her mother was daughter of a Spanish doctor and descended from the Spanish nobility. Her British father worked for the Eastern Telegraph Company (later Cable and Wireless) on African and Mediterranean stations until 1932. At the age of three, she was sent to join her older sister at boarding school in Sussex.

She joined the British Red Cross in 1940 and later trained as a nurse at St Thomas' Hospital, London, during World War II. In 1947, she retired and married Dr James Crichton, but discovered that he was addicted to drugs. In 1949, soon after their daughter Veronica was born, he was committed to hospital and she returned to nursing and writing. In 1952, she sold her first romance novel, published in 1954, the same year that her husband died. She specialised in Doctor-Nurse romances, using her personal experience as inspiration.

In 1969, she decided to move to Edinburgh. Her daughter read History at Newnham College, Cambridge, and became a journalist and Labour Party communications adviser, before her death from cancer in 2002.

She died on 3 October 2006 in Edinburgh.

Plagiarism

In late 2006, Lucilla Andrews' autobiography No Time for Romance became the focus of a posthumous controversy. It has been alleged that the novelist Ian McEwan plagiarised from this work while writing his novel, Atonement. McEwan has protested his innocence.

Quotes

  • "It was ironic that even my small triumphs were not attributed to me." (Pippa Dexter: in "Pippa's Story", 29 June 1968 Woman's Weekly page 17)
  • References

    Lucilla Andrews Wikipedia