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Ursula Torday

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Occupation
  
Novelist

Name
  
Ursula Torday

Language
  
English

Role
  
Writer


Nationality
  
British

Died
  
1997

Period
  
1935–1982

Education
  
University of Oxford

Born
  
Ursula Joyce Torday 19 February 1912 London, England, UK (
1912-02-19
)

Pen name
  
Ursula Torday, Paula Allardyce, Charity Blackstock, Lee Blackstock, Charlotte Keppel

Genre
  
Gothic, romance, mystery

Notable awards
  
Romantic Novelists' Association Awards

Books
  
Miss Jonas's boy, Dewey death, The lonely strangers

Nominations
  
Edgar Award for Best Novel

Ursula Torday (19 February 1912 in London, England – 6 March 1997), was a British writer of some 60 gothic, romance and mystery novels from 1935 to 1982. She also used the pseudonyms of Paula Allardyce , Charity Blackstock, Lee Blackstock, and Charlotte Keppel. In 1961, her novel Witches' Sabbath won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association

Contents

Early years

Ursula Joyce Torday was born on 19 February 1912 (in some sources wrongly 1888) in London, England, United Kingdom, daughter of mixed parentage, her mother Gaia Rose Macdonald, was Scottish, and her father Emil Torday (1875–1931) was a Hungarian anthropologist, they married on 17 March 1910.

She studied at Kensington High School in London, before she went to the Oxford University, where she obtained a BA in English at Lady Margaret Hall College, and later a Social Science Certificate at London School of Economics.

First jobs

In the 1930s, she published her first three novels under her real name: Ursula Torday.

During World War II, she worked as a probation officer for the Citizen's Advice Bureau. During the next seven years she also ran a refugee scheme for Jewish children, an inspiration for several of her future novels such as The Briar Patch (a.k.a. Young Lucifer); The Children (a.k.a. Wednesday's Children) is her memoir about her work with children of the Holocaust. She worked as a typist at the National Central Library in London, inspiration for her future novel Dewey Death as Charity Blackstock. She also taught English to adult students.

Writing career

She returned to publishing in the early 1950s using the pen names of Paula Allardyce or Charity Blackstock (in some cases reedited as Lee Blackstock in the USA) to sign her gothic romance and mystery novels. Later, she also used the pen name Charlotte Keppel. She published her last novel in 1982.

Her novel Miss Fenny (a.k.a. The Woman in the Woods) as Charity (or Lee) Blackstock was nominated for an Edgar Award. In 1961, her novel Witches' Sabbath won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association

Ursula Torday died on 6 March 1997, at 85.

References

Ursula Torday Wikipedia