Stella Gibbons(1902-1989)
- Writer
British novelist Stella Gibbons was born in London, England, in 1902,
one of three children. Her father was a doctor with offices in the poor
section of the city, and her home life was not a happy one. She would
make up wild, romantic stories to tell her brothers and other
neighborhood children to "escape" from the poverty in the neighborhood
and the tense situations at home. Her father home-schooled her until
she was 13, at which time he sent her to the North London Collegiate
School for Girls. At 19 she attended University College in London for
two years, majoring in journalism (it was the only college in London
that actually had a journalism course).
After graduation she got a job at the British office of United Press, decoding cables. It was here she became a professional writer, learning to edit out irrelevant text, keep the reader interested in the article and present facts clearly and and with some flair. She spent ten years on "Fleet Street", doing different jobs for different employers, and began writing short stories and poetry. Unlike many writers, she refused to use a typewriter, preferring to write her stories, plots, ideas, etc., with a pen in notebooks. Her best-known novel is probably "Cold Comfort Farm", which was made into a film (Cold Comfort Farm (1995)).
She died in London, England, on Dec. 19, 1989.
After graduation she got a job at the British office of United Press, decoding cables. It was here she became a professional writer, learning to edit out irrelevant text, keep the reader interested in the article and present facts clearly and and with some flair. She spent ten years on "Fleet Street", doing different jobs for different employers, and began writing short stories and poetry. Unlike many writers, she refused to use a typewriter, preferring to write her stories, plots, ideas, etc., with a pen in notebooks. Her best-known novel is probably "Cold Comfort Farm", which was made into a film (Cold Comfort Farm (1995)).
She died in London, England, on Dec. 19, 1989.