Eileen Dewhurst | |
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Born | Eileen Mary Dewhurst 27 May 1929 Liverpool, England |
Occupation | Mystery writer |
Education |
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Eileen Dewhurst (born 27 May 1929) is a British writer of mysteries. Her published work includes more than 20 crime novels, and her short stories have appeared in anthologies and in periodicals, including Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine . Her memberships have included the Society of Authors, the Crime Writers Association, and the Oxford Union Society. [1]
Born in 1929 in Liverpool, England, Dewhurst attended the Huyton College for Girls in Liverpool from 1937 to 1947, then St. Anne's College, Oxford, graduating with a B.A. in English in 1951 and an M.A. in 1956. She held academic administrative posts in London and Liverpool and at the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce from 1953 through 1964. From then through 1980, she worked as a freelance journalist. From 1976 through 1982, she was the official guide to the Lady Lever Art Gallery in Port Sunlight. Her novels began to appear in print in 1975. [2]
According to Martin Edwards in St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers, Dewhurst favors plots that involve impersonation and disguise, including transvestism. Her writing style is "admirably unfussy", he says, and her stories are inventive rather than formulaic. She takes risks with her plots, and her best novels, such as A Private Prosecution, are "excellent". Her work, though "uneven", he says, "deserves to be better known." [2]
The unevenness mentioned by Edwards is noted by others. A reviewer for Publishers Weekly praises Dewhurst for skillfully connecting the plot twists in Now You See Her but finds the "myriad and rapid name and character changes" of the protagonist, Phyllida Moon, "hard to credit." [3] On the other hand, a review of a later Phyllida Moon novel, No Love Lost, praises the character changes as well as the plot: "Brisk dialogue and the complications of Moon's many alter egos add flair to this old-fashioned whodunit." [4] Less impressed with No Love Lost is the reviewer for Kirkus Reviews , who finds Phyllida's alter egos unconvincing. This and other plot twists lead to a denouement "that doesn’t bear close scrutiny." [5]
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