Alice Diehl
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Alice Diehl (25 February 1844 – 13 June 1912) was an English musician and novelist. She changed in 1872 from being a concert pianist into being a writer – of music reviews, some 50 novels and several other books.


Family and career

Alice Diehl was born Alice Georgina Mangold in
Aveley Aveley is a town and former civil parish in the unitary authority of Thurrock in Essex, England, and forms one of the traditional Church of England parishes. Aveley is 16 miles (26.2 km) east of Charing Cross. In the 2021 United Kingdom ...
,
Essex Essex () is a county in the East of England. One of the home counties, it borders Suffolk and Cambridgeshire to the north, the North Sea to the east, Hertfordshire to the west, Kent across the estuary of the River Thames to the south, and G ...
, at the house of her maternal grandfather, Charles Vidal, a village doctor born in
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, who had practised in Aveley since 1804. She was the second child of her parents, Carl Mangold and Eliza, née Vidal, who lived mainly in London, where Carl taught music.Thurrock's Musical History: Alice Diehl, musician and novelis
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
Thurrock History Societ

/ref> Alice Diehl first performed publicly on the piano in Paris in 1861. In 1863 she married the violinist and song composer Louis Diehle (c. 1837–1910), by whom she had six children. Her playing was praised by Berlioz and she continued to perform in London until 1872.''The Feminist Companion to Literature in English'', eds Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London, Batsford, 1990), p. 293.


From music to writing

As a child, Alice had had two books of her poems published, so that her switch to writing in about 1872 was a return to an earlier interest. The idea that she should become a professional pianist had arisen when her father showed some signs of mental instability and her grandfather viewed this as a source of family income. For a time she was taught in
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by a pianist and composer, Adolphe Henselt, who was known to her father. Henselt's unusual methods of teaching piano are described in her memoirs. Subsequently, Diehl herself gained an income from teaching music, coupled with writing reviews for ''Musical World'' and other periodicals, and later short stories. From the early 1880s onwards she produced almost 50 novels, including ''Griselda'' (1886), which has been described by a recent critic as "a heavy-handed story of womanly self-sacrifice". Many of these were mysteries or sensation novels. Of interest for the light they shed on musical life and other aspects of London are her two autobiographical volumes: ''Musical Memories'' (1897) and ''The True Story of My Life'' (1908). The second was also published in New York and appeared in the same year as her ''Life of Beethoven''.British Library catalogu
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
/ref> For ''The Story of Philosophy'' (1881) she used the pseudonym Aston Leigh.


Death

Alice Diehl died on 13 June 1912. Shortly before her death she is known to have been living in
Ingatestone Ingatestone is a village and former civil parish in Essex, England, with a population of 5,365 inhabitants according to the 2011 census. Just north lies the village of Fryerning, the two forming now the parish of Ingatestone and Fryerning. Ing ...
, Essex. A Thurrock Heritage plaque to Alice Diehl was unveiled on 23 January 2010 at the Aveley Christian Centre, Stifford Road. This was formerly the school opposite the house in Park Lane where she was born.


References


External links

*The Thurrock site article on her life and career includes a list of her novels
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
*The text of ''The True Story of My Life''
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
*The text of Diehl's novel ''Griselda'' (1886
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
*The text of Diehl's novel ''Dr. Paull's Theory'' (1893
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
*''A Woman Martyr'' (1912) on Gutenberg in various form
Retrieved 9 November 2016.
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Diehl, Alice 1844 births 1912 deaths English women novelists 19th-century English novelists 20th-century English novelists Women classical pianists English classical pianists 19th-century classical pianists People from Aveley 19th-century English women writers 19th-century British women musicians 20th-century English women writers 19th-century women pianists