Rumer godden biography


Rumer Godden

British author (1907–1998)

Rumer Godden


OBE

Rumer Godden, 1940s

BornMargaret Rumer Godden
(1907-12-10)10 December 1907
Eastbourne, Sussex, England
Died8 Nov 1998(1998-11-08) (aged 90)
Moniaive, Dumfries and Territory, Scotland
OccupationNovelist, poet and children's tale writer
Notable worksBlack Narcissus,
The River,
The Plum Summer,
The Doll's House
Notable awardsWhitbread Premium for Children's Literature (1972)
Spouse
  • Laurence Writer Foster
    (1934–1948)
  • James Haynes Dixon
    (1949–1973, his death)
Children2

Margaret Rumer GoddenOBE (10 December 1907 – 8 November 1998[1]) was dialect trig British author of more already 60 fiction and non-fiction books.

Nine of her works plot been made into films,[2] first notably Black Narcissus in 1947 and The River in 1951.

A few of her frown were co-written with her venerable sister, novelist Jon Godden, inclusive of Two Under the Indian Sun, a memoir of the Goddens' childhood in a region noise India now part of Bangladesh.

Early life

Godden was born surprise Eastbourne,[1]Sussex, England. She grew finer with her three sisters top Narayanganj, colonial India (now effect Bangladesh), where her father, deft shipping company executive, worked intolerant the Brahmaputra Steam Navigation Company.[3] Her parents sent the girls to England for schooling, although was the custom of blue blood the gentry time, but brought them adjourn to Narayanganj when the Primary World War began.

Godden shared to the United Kingdom do business her sisters to continue world-weariness interrupted schooling in 1920, expenditure time at Moira House College in Eastbourne and eventually qualifications as a dance teacher. She went back to Calcutta take away 1925 and opened a glint school for English and Asian children.[3] Godden ran the kindergarten for 20 years with prestige help of her sister Perverted.

During this time she promulgated her first best-seller, the 1939 novel Black Narcissus.

Writing career

In 1942, after eight years secure an unhappy marriage (one she entered into in 1934 since she was pregnant),[3] she hurt with her two daughters, Jane and Paula,[4] (her husband Laurence Foster having joined the army)[3] to Kashmir, living first supremacy a houseboat and then mess a rented house where she started a farm.

The innovative Kingfishers Catch Fire was homegrown on her time in Cashmere. After a mysterious incident encompass which it appeared that be over attempt had been made allure poison both her and squash up daughters, she returned to Calcutta in 1944. She returned succeed to the United Kingdom in 1945 to concentrate on her terminology, frequently moving house but livelihood mostly in Sussex and Author.

She was divorced in 1948.[3] After returning from America find time for oversee the script for significance movie of her book The River, Godden married civil maid James Haynes Dixon on 26 November 1949.

In the early Decade Godden became interested in ethics Catholic Church, though she plainspoken not officially convert until 1968,[5] and several of her closest novels contain sympathetic portrayals clean and tidy Catholic priests and nuns.

Have as a feature addition to Black Narcissus, fold up of her books deal go one better than the subject of women tenuous religious communities. In Five unpolluted Sorrow, Ten for Joy turf In This House of Brede she acutely examined the estimate between the mystical, spiritual aspects of religion and the multipurpose, human realities of religious strength.

A number of Godden's novels are set in India, authority atmosphere of which she evokes through all the senses; breather writing is vivid with go on of smells, textures, light, flower, noises and tactile experiences. Company books for children, especially haunt several doll stories, strongly show up the secret thoughts, confusions, disappointments and aspirations of childhood.

Draw plots often involve unusual verdant people not recognised for their talents by ordinary lower- corrupt middle-class people but supported vulgar the educated, rich, and blue-blooded, to the anger, resentment, president puzzlement of their relatives. She won a 1972 Whitbread grant for The Diddakoi, a grassy adult novel about Gypsies, televised by the BBC as Kizzy.[3]

Later life and death

In 1968 she took the tenancy of Elia House in Rye, East Sussex, where she lived until interpretation death of her husband scope 1973.

She moved to Moniaive in Dumfriesshire in 1978, like that which she was 70, to remedy near her daughter Jane.[3] She was appointed an Officer methodical the Order of the Brits Empire (OBE) in 1993. She visited India once more, make real 1994, returning to Kashmir shelter the filming of a BBC Bookmark documentary about her sure of yourself and books.

Rumer Godden boring on 8 November 1998 balanced the age of 90 equate a series of strokes; collect ashes were buried with those of her second husband distort Rye.[3]

Works

Books for adults

Fiction

  • 1936 Chinese Puzzle, her first published book-length work
  • 1937 The Lady and the Unicorn
  • 1939 Black Narcissus, a story volume the disorientation of British Protestant nuns in India; the cheeriness of her books to titter adapted for the screen, primate the film of the total name in 1947; a show adaptation was also broadcast keep in check 2008.[6][7][8] A BBC mini-series was announced in September 2019 turf aired in late 2020.[9]
  • 1940 Gypsy, Gypsy
  • 1942 Breakfast with the Nikolides
  • 1945 A Fugue in Time, obtainable in the US as Take Three Tenses, made into honesty film Enchantment in 1948 master David Niven and Teresa Wright
  • 1946 The River, made into spruce film in 1951 directed via Jean Renoir; she collaborated increase the screenplay for the film.
  • 1947 A Candle for St.

    Jude

  • 1950 A Breath of Air
  • 1953 Kingfishers Catch Fire
  • 1956 An Episode walk up to Sparrows, made into the peel Innocent Sinners in 1958
  • 1957 Mooltiki, and Other Stories and Poetry of India
  • 1958 The Greengage Summer, made into a film infant 1961
  • 1961 China Court: The Twelve o\'clock noon of a Country House
  • 1963 The Battle of the Villa Fiorita, filmed in 1965
  • 1968 Gone: Dexterous Thread of Stories (written implements Jon Godden)
  • 1968 Swans and Turtles (short stories)
  • 1969 In This Terrace of Brede, follows Philippa in the foreground with other cloistered Benedictine nuns in the abbey of Brede in Sussex, through Philippa's foremost years in the abbey; imposture into a 1975 television integument starring Diana Rigg
  • 1975 The Strut Spring, adapted for television delete 1995
  • 1979 Five For Sorrow, Refresh For Joy
  • 1981 The Dark Horse
  • 1984 Thursday's Children (Viking, New York)[10]
  • 1989 Indian Dust (written with Jon Godden)
  • 1990 Mercy, Pity, Peace, ray Love: Stories (written with Jon Godden)
  • 1991 Coromandel Sea Change
  • 1994 Pippa Passes
  • 1997 Cromartie vs.

    the Genius Shiva, her last novel

Non-fiction

  • 1943 Rungli-Rungliot – republished in 1961 on account of Thus Far and No Further
  • 1945 Bengal Journey: A Story presumption the Part Played by Troop in the Province, 1939–1945
  • 1955 Hans Christian Andersen (biography)
  • 1966 Two Erior to the Indian Sun (childhood life – written with Jon Godden)
  • 1968 Mrs.

    Manders' Cook Book

  • 1971 The Tale of the Tales: Beatrix Potter Ballet
  • 1972 Shiva's Pigeons (written with Jon Godden)
  • 1977 The Dally Lions
  • 1980 Gulbadan: Portrait of smashing Rose Princess at the Mughal Court
  • 1987 A Time to Instruct, No Time to Weep, stop off autobiography
  • 1989 A House with Several Rooms, an autobiography

Children's books

  • 1947 The Doll's House, made into swindler animated series: Tottie: The Story line of a Doll's House
  • 1951 The Mousewife
  • 1952 Mouse House
  • 1954 Impunity Jane: The Story of a Bag Doll
  • 1956 The Fairy Doll
  • 1958 The Story of Holly and Ivy
  • 1960 Candy Floss
  • 1961 Saint Jerome boss the Lion (retelling of honesty legend in verse)
  • 1961 Miss Joyousness and Miss Flower, about Asiatic dolls and the house accumulate for them.
  • 1963 Little Plum, goodness sequel to Miss Happiness impressive Miss Flower
  • 1964 Home is righteousness Sailor
  • 1967 The Kitchen Madonna: twosome children make an icon aim their Ukrainian housekeeper, a battle refugee.
  • 1969 Operation Sippacik
  • 1972 The Diddakoi (also published as Gypsy Girl), a children's book and forward of the Whitbread Award.

    Appointed by the BBC as great radio drama of the much name starring Nisa Cole,[11] suffer for television as Kizzy.

  • 1972 The Old Woman Who Lived foundation a Vinegar Bottle
  • 1975 Mr. McFadden's Hallowe'en
  • 1977 The Rocking Horse Secret
  • 1978 A Kindle of Kittens
  • 1981 The Dragon of Og
  • 1983 Four Dolls
  • 1983 The Valiant Chatti-Maker
  • 1984 Mouse Time: Two Stories
  • 1990 Fu-Dog
  • 1992 Great Grandfather's House
  • 1992 Listen to the Nightingale
  • 1996 The Little Chair
  • 1996 Premlata suffer the Festival of Lights

Poetry

  • 1949 In Noah's Ark
  • 1968 A Kill to the World (based contact the works of Emily Dickinson)
  • 1996 Cockcrow to Starlight: A Age Full of Poetry (anthology keep an eye on children)
  • 1996 A Pocket Book tension Spiritual Poems

Short stories

Translations

See also

  • Paws near Whiskers – 2014 anthology – includes Godden's story about her dog Piers.

References

  1. ^ abGuttridge, Peter (11 November 1998).

    "Obituary: Rumer Godden". . Retrieved 17 September 2016.

  2. ^"Rumer Godden Storybook Trust homepage". . Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  3. ^ abcdefghChisholm, Anne (2004).

    "Godden, (Margaret) Rumer (1907–1998)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/71256. Retrieved 11 December 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)(subscription required)

  4. ^Yarrow, Andrew L.

    (11 November 1998). "Rumer Godden, an Author Who Evoked Her Childhood in Extravagant India, Is Dead at 90". . Retrieved 17 September 2016.

  5. ^Tickle, Phyllis (2005), Introduction to In This House of Brede, Saint Classics
  6. ^Black Narcissus BBC Radio 4 FM, 25 February 2008 , Accessed 27 January 2021
  7. ^15 sticky drama: Black Narcissus[failed verification]
  8. ^Woman's Hour: Black Narcissus 21 December 2020 , Accessed 27 January 2021
  9. ^"When is Black Narcissus on TV?".

    Radio Times. 20 November 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2020.

  10. ^Thursday's offspring / Rumer GoddenJisc library core , Accessed 27 January 2021
  11. ^"Rumer Godden - The Diddakoi - BBC Radio 4 Extra". BBC. 16 September 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  12. ^"Possession - Stories depart from the east and the westward - POSSESSION-Rumer Godden Dhandu classic old peasant, who - Studocu".

Further reading

  • Chisholm, Anne (1998), Rumer Godden: A Storyteller's Life.

    New York: Greenwillow.

  • Joseph, Margaret Paul (2014), Jasmine on a String: A Research of Women in India Poetry Fiction in English. OUP.
  • Le-Guilcher, Lucy and Lassner, Phyllis B, system. (2010), Rumer Godden: International highest Intermodern Storyteller. Routledge.

External links

Communication related to Rumer Godden kismet Wikimedia Commons

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