Pamela Hinkson (19 November 1900 – 26 May 1982) was an Irish writer.
Hinkson was the daughter of Katharine Tynan and barrister Henry Albert Hinkson (1865–1919). She was widely published[1] and her book, The Ladies' Road (1932), sold over 100,000 copies in the Penguin edition.[2]
Under the pseudonym of Peter Deane, Hinkson wrote The Victors (1925) and Harvest (1927) set during and after the First World War.[3] The identity of 'Peter Deane' was revealed by the writer Hugh Cecil following research into his 1995 book The Flower of Battle: British Fiction Writers of the First World War.
Her last publication was Golden rose in 1944.
She died on 26 May 1982 aged 81.[4]
Bibliography
edit- The End of all Dreams. 1923
- The Girls of Redlands (1923)
- Patsey at School (1925)
- St. Mary's (1927)
- Schooldays at Meadowfield (1930)
- Wind from the West (1930)
- The Ladies' Road (1932)
- Victory Plays the Game (1933)
- Connor's Wood (revised and completed by Pamela Hinkson) (1933)
- The Deeply Rooted (1935)
- The Light of Ireland (1935)
- Victory's Last Term (1936)
- Seventy Years Young (Memories of Elizabeth, Countess of Fingall told to Pamela Hinkson) (1937)
- Irish Gold (1939)
- Indian Harvest (1941)
- Golden Rose (1944)
References
edit- ^ Sailer, Susan Shaw (1997). Representing Ireland: Gender, Class, Nationality. University Press of Florida. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-8130-1543-9.
- ^ "Archives hub".
- ^ Ouditt, Sharon (2000). Women Writers of the First World War: An Annotated Bibliography. Routledge. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-415-04752-4.
- ^ van de Kamp, Peter G. W. (1986). "Some Notes on the Literary Estate of Pamela Hinkson". In Gould, Warwick (ed.). Yeats Annual No. 4. The Macmillan Press Ltd. p. 181. ISBN 978-1-349-06838-8. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
Sources
edit- Goodreads
- Hugh Cecil, The Flower of Battle: British Fiction Writers of the First World War (Secker & Warburg, 1995) - Chapter 12