Photo de l'auteur

Eleanor Fairburn (1928–2015)

Auteur de The rose in spring

9 oeuvres 88 utilisateurs 6 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Eleanor M Fairburn

Notice de désambiguation :

(eng) aka Emma Gayle, Catherine Carfax, Elena Lyons, Anne Neville

Séries

Œuvres de Eleanor Fairburn

The rose in spring (1971) 22 exemplaires
The White Seahorse (1970) 20 exemplaires
The rose at harvest end (1974) 15 exemplaires
White Rose, Dark Summer (1972) 11 exemplaires
Crowned ermine (1968) 5 exemplaires
Green Popinjays (1962) 5 exemplaires
Winter's Rose (1976) 3 exemplaires
The Golden Hive 3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Carfax, Catherine
Lyons, Elena
Nevile, Anne
Lyons, Eva
Date de naissance
1928-02-23
Date de décès
2015-01-02
Lieu de sépulture
Aughavale Cemetery, Westport, Ireland
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Ireland
Lieu de naissance
Westport, Connaught, Ireland
Westport, County Mayo, Ireland
Lieu du décès
Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK
Lieux de résidence
Ireland
England, UK
Professions
historical novelist
crime writer
Courte biographie
Eleanor Fairburn was one of the many pen names of Eva Lyons. She was born in Westport in the west of Ireland, the only child of Mary and Michael Lyons. Her mother died when she was three years old. At age eight, she went to a convent boarding school in Balla, from which she graduated at 17. She trained in Dublin for a career in fashion design, then worked as a receptionist in a hospital, supplementing her income by writing articles and stories for newspapers. She also produced knitwear designs for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar. She married Brian Fairburn, an analytical chemist, with whom she had a daughter and settled in Yorkshire, England. She began her career as novelist with the publication of The Green Popinjays in 1962. Her second and most successful book was The White Seahorse (1964), about the pirate queen Grace O’Malley. In all, she wrote about 25 works of historical fiction and crime thrillers, using various pseudonyms, including Emma Gayle, Catherine Carfax, Elena Lyons, and Anne Neville. She taught a writing course at the University of Leeds for 10 years and was a founding member of the Middlesbrough Writers’ Group. After her husband's death, she moved to Norwich to be closer to her daughter.
Notice de désambigüisation
aka Emma Gayle, Catherine Carfax, Elena Lyons, Anne Neville

Membres

Critiques

Leben der irischen Piratenkönigin Grace O'Malley
 
Signalé
Buecherei.das-Sarah | 1 autre critique | Dec 24, 2014 |
The fascinating story of Princess Nesta of Deheubarth [present-day South Wales]: her girlhood at Romsey Abbey, life as wife of a Norman knight, Sir Gerald de Windsor; mistress of the English King Henry I; and finally after she is widowed, wife to another Norman knight, Sir Bruno de Hait. She is called by the Welsh the "Helen of Wales". Like Helen of Troy, she too "broke her country's peace and shed her blood." This was a part of history I didn't know much about, and the story made it very vivid: ongoing struggle between Wales and England, then war between England and Normandy. As Sir Gerald says at one point in the novel: "If she were born less beautiful, none of this [tragedy] would have happened." Nesta is the mother of the Fitzgeralds of Ireland. All the main characters were fleshed out. The author treated Nesta sensitively. As I read, I was transported back to 11th-12th century Wales, England, and France through the author's literary gift. Any romance was not maudlin and advanced the story. The 'Historical Sequence' was of note, also the beautiful map of 'The Kingdom of Deheubarth with surrounding territories' drawn by the author's daughter on the front end-papers.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
janerawoof | 2 autres critiques | Aug 12, 2014 |
The fascinating story of Princess Nesta of Deheubarth [present-day South Wales]: her girlhood at Romsey Abbey, life as wife of a Norman knight, Sir Gerald de Windsor; mistress of the English King Henry I; and finally after she is widowed, wife to another Norman knight, Sir Bruno de Hait. She is called by the Welsh the "Helen of Wales". Like Helen of Troy, she too "broke her country's peace and shed her blood." This was a part of history I didn't know much about, and the story made it very vivid: ongoing struggle between Wales and England, then war between England and Normandy. As Sir Gerald says at one point in the novel: "If she were born less beautiful, none of this [tragedy] would have happened." Nesta is the mother of the Fitzgeralds of Ireland. All the main characters were fleshed out. The author treated Nesta sensitively. As I read, I was transported back to 11th-12th century Wales, England, and France through the author's literary gift. Any romance was not maudlin and advanced the story. The 'Historical Sequence' was of note, also the beautiful map of 'The Kingdom of Deheubarth with surrounding territories' drawn by the author's daughter on the front end-papers.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
janerawoof | 2 autres critiques | Aug 12, 2014 |
Ein spannendes Buch über Grace o'Malley und ihr Leben. Was der Einbabd nicht vermuten lässt; das Buch ist fesselnd und ein wahnsinnig interessante Biographie über eine mutige Frau aus Irland.
Lesenswert!
 
Signalé
Bibliokatze | 1 autre critique | Dec 12, 2013 |

Listes

Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Membres
88
Popularité
#209,356
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
6
ISBN
15
Langues
1
Favoris
1

Tableaux et graphiques