Love Books 1

 

 


Authors
Categories
Reviews
Classic Mystery Literature
Interviews
Awards
Links

 

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

ELLIS PETERS
(1913-1995)
(Pseudonym of Edith Pargeter, aka Jolyon Carr)

Felse Family Series

Brother Cadfael Series

Other Non Series

Categories: Historical, Whodunit, UK Police Procedural

Links

The Cadfael Chronicles

Born in Horsehay in Shropshire on September 28 1913, Edith Pargeter went to Coalbrookdale High School. Before World War II she worked as a chemist's assistant and from 1940 was a teleprinter operator in Liverpool for the Royal Navy and for this was awarded the British Empire Medal. By then she had written a number of novels. In 1947 Pargeter went with her brother Ellis to a young workers summer school in Czechoslovakia and fell in love with the place. She taught herself Czech and translated many of their major literary works. She was awarded the Czechoslovak Society for International Relations Gold Medal in 1968. Her mystery writing began, with the exception of a couple of novels as Jolyon Carr, in 1951 with Fallen into the Pit, the first of the Felse Family series, and used her pseudonym Ellis Peters for the first time. The second book in the series, Death and the Joyful Woman (1962), won the Edgar Award. In 1977, with A Morbid Taste for Bones, enter one of the most famous medieval sleuths of all times: Brother Cadfael. This series gave her a deserved fame leaving an imprint in the history of literature. Monk's Hood won the Silver Dagger in 1980 and she was awarded the Diamond Dagger in 1993. Pargeter also received an OBE. She died in 1995.
Vote for your favorite book by Ellis Peters: