Photo de l'auteur

Hugh C. Rae (1935–2014)

Auteur de Harkfast: The Making of the King

76+ oeuvres 683 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Hugh C. Rae was born on November 22, 1935 in Glasgow, Scotland. After graduating from secondary school, he worked as an assistant in the antiquarian department of John Smith's bookshop. His first novel, Skinner, was published in 1963. He wrote several novels using his name including Night Pillow, A afficher plus Few Small Bones, The Interview, The Shooting Gallery, The Marksman, and Harkfast: The Making of a King. He also wrote as Robert Crawford, R. B. Houston, James Albany, and Stuart Stern. Using the pseudonym Jessica Stirling, he wrote more than 30 historical romances. He wrote the first few novels with Peggie Coghlan. However, when she retired 7 years after the first book was published, he wrote the remainder on his own. The books written under this pseudonym include The Spoiled Earth, The Constant Star, Hearts of Gold, and Whatever Happened to Molly Bloom. He died on September 24, 2014 at the age of 78. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Notice de désambiguation :

(eng) Hugh Crauford Rae also wrote under the pen names of "Hugh C. Rae", "Hugh Rae", "Robert Crawford", "R.B. Houston", "Jessica Stirling" (initially with Peggie Coghlan), "Stuart Stern" (with S. Ungar), "James Albany" and "Caroline Crosby".

Séries

Œuvres de Hugh C. Rae

Harkfast: The Making of the King (1976) 39 exemplaires
The Island Wife (1997) 27 exemplaires
The Wind from the Hills (1998) 23 exemplaires
The Strawberry Season (2000) 22 exemplaires
The Deep Well at Noon (1979) 20 exemplaires
The Penny Wedding (1994) 20 exemplaires
Sisters Three (2001) 19 exemplaires
The Piper's Tune (1999) 18 exemplaires
Prized Possessions (1998) 18 exemplaires
Lantern for the Dark (1992) 17 exemplaires
The Gates of Midnight (1983) 16 exemplaires
The Hiring Fair (1976) 16 exemplaires
The Blue Evening Gone (1981) 16 exemplaires
Shadows on the Shore (1993) 15 exemplaires
The Wise Child (1990) 15 exemplaires
The Spoiled Earth (1977) 15 exemplaires
The Paradise Waltz (2009) 14 exemplaires
The Workhouse Girl (1996) 14 exemplaires
The Dark Pasture (1977) 14 exemplaires
Shamrock Green (2002) 13 exemplaires
The Minotaur Factor (1977) 12 exemplaires
Wives at War (2003) 12 exemplaires
The Good Provider (1988) 11 exemplaires
The Last Voyage (2011) 11 exemplaires
A Corner of the Heart (2010) 11 exemplaires
The Asking Price (1989) 11 exemplaires
Blessings in Disguise (2006) 10 exemplaires
The Welcome Light (1991) 10 exemplaires
The shooting gallery (1972) 10 exemplaires
Creature Comforts (1986) 10 exemplaires
A Kiss and a Promise (2008) 9 exemplaires
Kiss the Boss Goodbye (1970) 9 exemplaires
Warrior Caste (1982) 9 exemplaires
Hearts of Gold (1987) 8 exemplaires
Treasures on Earth (1985) 8 exemplaires
Strathmore (1975) 8 exemplaires
The Travelling Soul (1978) 8 exemplaires
The Dresden Finch (1976) 7 exemplaires
Deacon's Dagger (1982) 7 exemplaires
The Marrying Kind (1996) 7 exemplaires
The Shroud Society (1969) 6 exemplaires
The Constant Star (2014) 6 exemplaires
The Wayward Wife (2013) 6 exemplaires
The Rookery (1974) 6 exemplaires
Cockleburr = Pay As You Die (1969) 6 exemplaires
Call Home the Heart (1977) 6 exemplaires
The Fields of Fortune (2007) 6 exemplaires
Skinner (1965) 5 exemplaires
The Captive Heart (2004) 5 exemplaires
The Poison Tree (1978) 4 exemplaires
The Haldanes (1992) 4 exemplaires
Close Combat (1983) 4 exemplaires
Mailed Fist (1982) 4 exemplaires
Storm Over Scotland (2003) 4 exemplaires
Sullivan (1978) 4 exemplaires
The Marksman (1971) 3 exemplaires
One True Love (2005) 3 exemplaires
Beloved Sinner (1978) 3 exemplaires
Borneo Story (1984) 3 exemplaires
Haunting at Waverley Falls (1981) 2 exemplaires
Night Pillow (1972) 2 exemplaires
Last Bastion (1984) 2 exemplaires
Whip Hand (1972) 2 exemplaires
The Badger's Daughter (1971) 2 exemplaires
På farligt spår 1 exemplaire
Rock Harvest (1975) 1 exemplaire
Shroud Society (1971) 1 exemplaire
Minotaur Factor 1 exemplaire
In de schaduw van de mijn (1977) 1 exemplaire
Privelidged Strangers 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Fantasy: fünf ungekürzte Romane (1991) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Rae, Hugh C.
Nom légal
Rae, Hugh Crauford
Autres noms
Rae, Hugh C.
Rae, Hugh
Crawford, Robert
Houston, R.B.
Stirling, Jessica
Stern, Stuart (tout afficher 8)
Albany, James
Crosby, Caroline
Date de naissance
1935-11-22
Date de décès
2014-09-24
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Lieu du décès
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Études
Knightswood Senior Secondary School, Glasgow
Agent
Fraser and Dunlop Scripts Ltd.
Courte biographie
Hugh Crauford Rae was born on November 22, 1935 in Glasgow, Scotland, UK, son of Isobel and Robert Rae. He published his first stories aged 11 in the Robin comic, winning a cricket bat the same year in a children’s writing competition. After graduating from secondary school, he worked as an assistant in the antiquarian department of John Smith's bookshop. At work, he met her future wife, Elizabeth. Published since 1963, he started to wrote suspense novels as Hugh C. Rae, but he also used the pseudonyms of Robert Crawford, R.B. Houston, Stuart Stern (with S. Ungar) and James Albany. On 1973, his novel "The Shooting Gallery" was nominee by the Edgar Award. On 1974, he wrote the first few romance novels with Peggie Coghlan, using the popular pseudonym Jessica Stirling. However, when she retired 7 years after the first book was published, he continued writing more than 30 on his own, and also as Caroline Crosby. His female pseudonyms first became widely known in 1999, when "The Wind from the Hills" was shortlisted for Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association. Widowed nine years ago, Hugh died on September 24, 2014 at the age of 78.
Notice de désambigüisation
Hugh Crauford Rae also wrote under the pen names of "Hugh C. Rae", "Hugh Rae", "Robert Crawford", "R.B. Houston", "Jessica Stirling" (initially with Peggie Coghlan), "Stuart Stern" (with S. Ungar), "James Albany" and "Caroline Crosby".

Membres

Critiques

A miner's daughter seeks revenge on the rich coal master for killing her family, but she grows to realize it wasn't his fault. Mirrin Stalker and Houston Lamont are the main characters.
 
Signalé
niquetteb | Jul 29, 2019 |
I read this book because Hugh Rae (for whatever reason) took the challenge to write a mutual friend into the story as a minor character. Puzzled by what role a Chinese girl from Singapore, in the 19th century known as the Straits Settlements, could play in Victorian-era Glasgow, I was delighted to find her a realistically drawn and feisty character. The main characters of the book are the McKennas, two sisters and a brother from Ireland who come to Glasgow in search of survival (to say "a better life" would be overstating the matter). Their first stop is a graveyard, where they glean the name of a recently-deceased Irishman in order to seek out his widow and pose as his nieces and nephew. Although she realizes the deception almost immediately, she quietly accepts them, pleased to have some "family" to care about - and says as much to the rent-collector who is concerned that she may be falling for a scam. He accepts her reference on their behalf, however, since she cannily is not giving money but her word, and from there we see all of these people interacting, changing, developing as the story continues. A joy to read.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
muumi | Aug 8, 2015 |
Not one of my favourite Hugh Rae books. I just couldn't like the main characters. They were well-depicted, but not sympathetic. There was a pompous, unpleasant shipyard owner, his meek wife who used to be vivacious before she fell under his blighting influence, and their annoying niece or more probably the man's unacknowledged daughter. Honestly, I didn't finish the book; after a few chapters I prevailed upon a trusted fellow reader to give me the story in short. She informed me that none of the main characters improved during the course of the book. There were delightful characters, with Hugh there are always delightful characters, but in this book they were peripheral. I'm sure the plot was fine, but if I don't care about the characters, what happens to them doesn't matter.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
muumi | Jul 16, 2015 |
This book is the 2nd part of a trilogy and is set in the late 1800's. I didn't read the first book, but maybe if I did, I would have enjoyed the story more. The plot is saturated with unrequited love, infidelity, sibling loyalty, and betrayal. Two characters were exceptionally horrible. If they were standing in my living room right now, I would do both of them bodily harm. The syntax was difficult to understand at times because the author is a Scot writing about people living in Scotland. Unless you are from that part of the world or are familiar with all things Scottish, you would need to read some of the sentences twice to understand. Some of the storyline centered around topics that were forbidden to talk about in the nineteenth century. I enjoyed the way they were talked about and boldy dealt with.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
brillow51 | Apr 15, 2014 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
76
Aussi par
1
Membres
683
Popularité
#37,041
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
5
ISBN
411
Langues
7

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