Isobel English

June Guesdon Braybrooke (born June Guesdon Jolliffe; 9 June 1920 in London 30 May 1994 in London), better known by her pen name Isobel English, was an English writer. Her best-known novel is Every Eye.

Life

Born in London to the Welsh civil servant John Mayne Jolliffe (1885–1957) and his Tasmanian wife May Guesdon (1885–1966), June was sent to Brittany when she was two for a salt-water cure for tuberculosis of the spine. Upon her return, she was sent in 1928 to La Retraite, a convent school in Burnham-on-Sea, Somerset, which she described in her 1956 novel Every Eye.

After secretarial college in London, she was taught literature by Kenneth Allott while working with him. She married Ronald Dundas Orr-Ewing in 1941 and they had a daughter, Victoria, in the following year, but they were divorced in 1951. In 1953, she married a fellow writer, Neville Braybrooke (1923–2001).

English's many literary friends included Beryl Bainbridge, Olivia Manning, and Stevie Smith, who described her tone as "very sagacious and very original – a voice of our times, ironical and involved." She died of leukaemia on 30 May 1994 and was buried in Hampstead Cemetery, Fortune Green, London.[1][2]

Writings

Isobel English published her first book, The Key that Rusts, a year after she was married (having described her occupation as "writer" on her marriage certificate). Every Eye followed two years later and in 1961 her final novel Four Voices. She published numerous short stories and a collection of them, Life after All, appeared in 1973 and won the Katherine Mansfield Prize. A single unstaged play, Meeting Point, was published in The New Review.

English wrote introductions for Virago reissues of several of Olivia Manning's books and collaborated with Braybrooke on Manning's biography.[2]

Bibliography

References

  1. The Independent, June 7, 1994
  2. 1 2 Peter Parker, "Braybrooke , June Guesdon (1920–1994)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 6 September 2016, pay-walled.
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