Siân Evans Explained

Siân Evans is a Welsh historical author, journalist, and film consultant, known for her guidebooks for the National Trust, of which she has written seven, and her works of social and cultural history. She has written a biography of Dame Margaret Greville and an account of six society hostesses in Britain between the World Wars.

Early life and career

Siân Evans was born to David and Rae. Born and raised in Whitchurch, Cardiff and attended Howells School, Llandaff.

She has worked for the National Trust, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the Design Museum.[1]

Writing

Until 2016, all of Evans's books were published by the National Trust, and they include seven guidebooks to properties in their ownership as well as a book of ghost stories associated with trust properties[2] and other works relating to the life of the country house. She has also written for the BBC Antiques Roadshow Magazine, the Daily Mail, the Daily Express, Coast Magazine, and the National Trust Members' Magazine.[3] Her first biography was Mrs Ronnie: The society hostess who collected kings (2013) which dealt with the life of Dame Margaret Greville of Polesden Lacey.

Her first book not to be published by the National Trust was Queen bees: Six brilliant and extraordinary society hostesses between the wars (Two Rivers, 2016) which chronicled the lives of six women, Nancy Astor, Maud Cunard, Laura Mae Corrigan, Margaret Greville, Sibyl Colefax, and Edith Londonderry, some of whom were of humble origins,[1] who became successful society hostesses in Britain between the World Wars. Reviewing the book in The Times, Virginia Nicholson found it to excel in anecdotes, punchlines, and descriptions of the detail of social mountaineering but to lack a deeper analysis of the motives of its subjects.[4] Frances Wilson in The Spectator described the women as less "brilliant and extraordinary" than "silly, sycophantic and generally pro-Nazi", feeling that Evans had overstated the importance of her subjects and questioning the decision to treat them as a group rather than singly, "queen bees being hard to distinguish in a swarm".[5]

Selected publications

National Trust guidebooks

Other works

Notes and References

  1. http://www.tworoadsbooks.com/non-fiction/queen-bees-sian-evans/ Queen Bees
  2. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1567582/National-Trust-releases-top-10-haunted-hotspots.html National Trust releases top 10 haunted hotspots.
  3. http://www.dianebanks.co.uk/science-current-affairs-and-history-authors/sin-evans Siân Evans.
  4. "Cut-glass gossip, broken plates - and such fun", Virginia Nicholson, The Times, Saturday Review, 3 September 2016, p. 3.
  5. http://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/09/how-to-suck-up-in-society-with-the-cunards-the-corrigans-and-the-colefaxes/ How to suck up in society — with the Cunards, the Corrigans and the Colefaxes.