Catherine Gavin
Dr Catherine Irvine Gavin was a Scottish academic historian, war correspondent, and historical novelist.[1]
Gavin was born in 1907, in Aberdeen and studied history and English at the University of Aberdeen, graduating with first-class honours.[1] After obtaining a doctorate on Louis Philippe of France, in 1931, she took up positions as a history lecturer at the Aberdeen and at the University of Glasgow.[1] She stood as a Unionist candidate in two parliamentary elections in the 1930s, but without success.[1]
During World War II, she worked in France and the Netherlands for Kemsley Newspapers.[1] after the war, she married American advertising executive John Ashcraft and moved to the United States with him.[1] they were together until his death in 1998.
Gavin's works (described by FictionDB as "historical romances") include the following:
- King Kill
- Clyde Valley (1938)
- The Hostile Shore (1940)
- The Black Milestone (1941)
- The Mountain of Light (1944)
- Madeleine (1957)
- The Cactus and the Crown (1962)
- The Fortress (1964)
- The Moon Into Blood (1966)
- The Devil in Harbour (1968)
- The House of War (1970)
- Give Me the Daggers (1972)
- The Snow Mountain (1973)
- Traitors' Gate (1976)
- None Dare Call It Treason (1978; set during World War II)
- How Sleep the Brave (1980)
- The Sunset Dream (1984)
- A Light Woman (1986)
- A Dawn of Splendour (1989)
- The French Fortune (1991)
She appeared as a "castaway" on the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 24 June 1978.[2]
The University of Aberdeen awarded her an honorary D Litt in 1986.[1] The Catherine Gavin Room there is named in her honour.[1] The university has a 1940 portrait of her, in oil, by Elizabeth Mary Watt.[3]
She died in 2001, aged 92.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Alexander, Flora (1 April 2000). "Catherine Gavin". Herald Scotland. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
- ↑ "Desert Island Discs - Castaway : Dr Catherine Gavin". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
- ↑ "BBC - Your Paintings - Catherine Gavin". Your Paintings. BBC. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
|