Jessie Sime | |
Birth Date: | 12 February 1868 |
Birth Place: | Hamilton, Lanarkshire, Scotland |
Death Place: | Wootton Wawen, Warwickshire, England |
Occupation: | Writer (novelist) |
Period: | 20th century |
Genre: | Fiction |
Relations: | James Sime, father |
Jessie Georgina Sime, (February 12, 1868 – September 13, 1958) was a Scottish born Canadian novelist.
Sime was born in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire in Scotland in 1868. Her parents were James Sime and Jessie Wilson. Her mother worked as a teacher and her father was a journalist and historian who wrote several books on German history.[1] [2] She was home schooled and also attended Queen's College in London. She spent a year in Berlin studying voice. She returned to England, where she worked as a journalist in London and Edinburgh. While in Edinburgh she began a relationship with a Canadian doctor, Walter William Chipman. In 1907 she decided to visit Canada and ended up staying in Montreal for the remainder of her life. She wrote most of her novels while in Canada and many of them were themed after her adopted country.[3]
Source:[4]
. Jessica Georgina Sime (1868-1958) . W.H. New . 1982 . Dictionary of Literary Biography . 92 . 356–61.