Photo de l'auteur

Mary Scott (2) (1888–1979)

Auteur de Breakfast at Six

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Mary Scott, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

45+ oeuvres 379 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Mary Edith Scott

Séries

Œuvres de Mary Scott

Breakfast at Six (1953) 32 exemplaires
Dinner doesn't Matter (1957) 19 exemplaires
A Change from Mutton (1968) 17 exemplaires
First Things First (1973) 15 exemplaires
Strangers for Tea (1975) 15 exemplaires
The White Elephant (1978) 15 exemplaires
Tea and Biscuits (1962) 15 exemplaires
Away from it all (1977) 14 exemplaires
Turkey at Twelve (1990) 14 exemplaires
Families are Fun (1971) 13 exemplaires
Pippa In Paradise (1961) 13 exemplaires
What does it matter? (1969) 12 exemplaires
It's Perfectly Easy (1987) 11 exemplaires
Strictly Speaking (1979) 11 exemplaires
One of the Family (1987) 11 exemplaires
Haven't we met before? (1970) 10 exemplaires
No Sad Songs (1975) 10 exemplaires
If I Don't, Who Will? (1971) 10 exemplaires
The Long Honeymoon (1963) 10 exemplaires
Board But No Breakfast (1978) 10 exemplaires
Yours to Oblige (1981) 9 exemplaires
Shepherd's Pie (1972) 8 exemplaires
Freddie (1995) 8 exemplaires
It Was Meant (1974) 8 exemplaires
Yes, darling (1967) 8 exemplaires
The Mangrove Murder (1988) 6 exemplaires
Who put it there? (1965) 6 exemplaires
The Unwritten Book 5 exemplaires
Fatal Lady (1995) 5 exemplaires
Barbara on the Farm 3 exemplaires
Barbara Prospers 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Scott, Mary Edith
Autres noms
Clarke, Mary Edith
Stuart, Marten
Fiat, J.
Date de naissance
1888-09-23
Date de décès
1979-07-16
Sexe
female
Nationalité
New Zealand
Lieu de naissance
Waimate North, Bay of Islands, New Zealand
Lieu du décès
Tokoroa, Waikato, New Zealand
Lieux de résidence
Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand
Howick, Auckland, New Zealand
King Country, New Zealand
Christchurch, New Zealand
Études
Napier Girls' High School
Auckland Grammar School
Auckland University College
Professions
teacher
author
librarian
novelist
playwright
journalist (tout afficher 7)
autobiographer
Courte biographie
Mary Scott was born Mary Edith Clarke in Waimate North in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand, a daughter of Marsden Clarke, a grazier, and his wife, Frances Emily Stuart. She had what she later described as an ideal childhood with her sister, only minimally supervised by an elderly nurse while their mother worked as a music teacher. In 1900, Mary was sent to boarding school, but two years later, moved with her family to Auckland. In 1905, she enrolled in Auckland University College to study English, French and history, and then won a scholarship to study for an MA in English and French, eventually graduating with first-class honors. In 1911, she began teaching at Christchurch Technical College, but the following year, returned to Auckland, where she accepted a position teaching English at Thames High School.

In 1913, her sister Frances married David Scott, a farmer; Mary and her mother went to Gisborne to stay with them. There Mary met David's brother Walter, whom she married in 1914. Immediately after their wedding, the couple moved to a remote sheep farm called Strathallan on the slopes of Pirongia Mountain. They were joined shortly afterwards on the next-door farm by Frances and David Scott.

Mary Scott and her husband farmed at Strathallan for 13 years in very primitive and isolated conditions, struggling with bush sickness and natural disasters. In 1917 and 1918, fires destroyed their house and all their possessions, as well as the bush, fences, and pastures, and killed most of the stock. In 1927, they moved with their four children to a new farm at Ngutunui, near Te Awamutu.
Mary took a job as a librarian in the town, which provided a house to live in and allowed her to send her two younger children to school there. They returned to the farm on weekends.

In the late 1920s, Mary started sending articles and stories to magazines and newspapers. In 1930, she was named the "Annual Discovery" of the New Zealand Artists' Annual and began to contribute a weekly item to the Dunedin Evening Star, for which she was to write for almost 50 years. A series of amusing stories based on her life in the bush, beginning with "Barbara Bakes," became the basis for her popular Barbara books. During her period at the Te Awamutu library, she contributed 14 articles a month to various papers and wrote her first two novels, published under the pseudonym Marten Stuart. Where the Apple Reddens (1934), followed by And Shadows Flee were historical romances set in the far north of early 19th century New Zealand. Her later, more humorous novels were published under her own name and set in contemporary times. She became widely read both in New Zealand and overseas.

Her first bestseller was Breakfast at Six (1953). Mary was a prolific and successful writer, producing three collections of plays, 33 novels, including five thrillers written with Joyce West, all while under the deadline of her regular contributions to leading newspapers and journals such as The Manchester Guardian.
Her autobiography, Days That Have Been (1966), and her most serious novel, The Unwritten Book (1957), told a grimmer story of life in the bush than her popular novels.

Membres

Critiques

A wonderful, gently humourous book that leaves you feeling as though you've been on holiday.
 
Signalé
yazzyfuzz | Jul 25, 2006 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
45
Aussi par
1
Membres
379
Popularité
#63,709
Évaluation
3.1
Critiques
1
ISBN
111
Langues
2

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