Margaret Irwin | |
Birth Date: | 27 March 1889[1] |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Death Place: | London, England |
Occupation: | Novelist |
Nationality: | British |
Period: | 1924-1967 |
Genre: | Historical, Biography, Horror |
Notableworks: | Young Bess |
Margaret Emma Faith Irwin (27 March 1889 – 11 December 1967) was an English historical novelist.[2] She also wrote a factual biography of Sir Walter Raleigh.
Irwin was born in Highgate Hill, London to Andrew Clarke Irwin (a native of Perth, Western Australia, d. 1902) and Anna Julia Irwin (née Baker, d. 1899), the daughter of Col. George Baker of the 16th (Queens) Lancers. She was brought up by her uncle S. T. Irwin (Sidney Thomas Irwin), a master of Classics at Clifton College, then a boys' school. Irwin attended the nearby Clifton High School, a girls' school, in Bristol, after her parents died.[3] She was educated at Clifton and at Oxford University, where she took a degree in English.[4] She began writing books and short stories in her early twenties. In 1929 she married children's author and illustrator John Robert Monsell, who created the covers for some of her books.[2]
Her novels were esteemed for the accuracy of their historical research, and she became a noted authority on the Elizabethan and early Stuart era. Young Bess, a novel about the early years of Queen Elizabeth I, was made into a film of the same title starring Jean Simmons.
Irwin wrote several ghost stories (including "The Book" and "The Earlier Service").[5] Irwin also wrote two fantasy novels: Still She Wished for Company is about a magical time slip, and These Mortals is an adult fairy tale about a wizard's daughter.[6]
The Story of Rupert of the Rhine (1938)