Sybil Cookson
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Sybil Irene Eleanor Taylor Cookson (1890–1963) was a journalist and writer of romantic novels. She wrote under the pen-name Sydney Tremayne. Her pseudonym is often confused with two male authors of the same name: Sydney (Durward) Tremayne (1912–1986) the Scottish journalist and poet, and Sydney Tremayne, an American investment strategist.


Biography

From the 1979
David & Charles David & Charles Ltd is an English publishing company. It is the owner of the David & Charles imprint, which specialises in craft and lifestyle publishing. David and Charles Ltd acts as distributor for all David and Charles Ltd books and cont ...
reprint of ''Tatlings'' (1922):
"Sydney Tremayne was the pseudonym of Sybil Taylor, who was born in 1890, the first child of John Taylor, Squire of Carshalton, then a little country village. With the advent of an heir the villiage was given a holiday and bonfires were lit. When a girl was born, the village was sent back to work and the bonfires extinguished. With what may have been a delayed reaction, at nineteen she ran away 'to live in an attic and write.' And write she did – three novels, ''The Auction Mart'' 915, filmed in 1920 ''The Broken Sign-post''
922 __NOTOC__ Year 922 ( CMXXII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * Summer – Battle of Constantinople: Emperor Romanos I sends Byza ...
and ''Eve''. The first two were best sellers, the third not so successful. In 1913 she married Roger Cookson, a racing driver with the Bentley team, but after World War I she ran away again, this time from her husband, taking her two daughters with her. This was when she turned to journalism and joined the ''
Tatler ''Tatler'' is a British magazine published by Condé Nast Publications focusing on fashion and lifestyle, as well as coverage of high society and politics. It is targeted towards the British upper-middle class and upper class, and those interes ...
''. From there she left to edit ''Eve: The Lady's Pictorial'' (before it became ''Britannia and Eve''), and was the film critic, fashion editor and beauty specialist; she was also writing a monthly article for the ''Tatler'' called "Nights Out". She retired in 1938 and never wrote, or wanted to, again. During World War II she returned to Roger Cookson (to his immense surprise) and stayed with him until her death in 1963."
She was the granddaughter of Sir
James Crichton-Browne Sir James Crichton-Browne MD FRS FRSE (29 November 1840 – 31 January 1938) was a leading Scottish psychiatrist, neurologist and eugenicist. He is known for studies on the relationship of mental illness to brain injury and for the developmen ...
and was educated at
Wycombe Abbey , motto_translation = Go in faith , established = 1896 , type = Independent boarding school , religion = Church of England , head_label = Headmistress , head = J. Duncan , chair_label = Chair ...
and in Paris. As Sybil Cookson, she published the novel ''Echo...'' (1919) and co-edited the memoir ''The Boy with the Guns'' (1919) by Lieutenant George W. Taylor. She published ''Tatlings'' (1922), illustrated by
Fish Fish are aquatic, craniate, gill-bearing animals that lack limbs with digits. Included in this definition are the living hagfish, lampreys, and cartilaginous and bony fish as well as various extinct related groups. Approximately 95% of ...
, a popular collection of self-penned epigrams that had previously appeared weekly in the ''Tatler''. After separating from her husband in 1938, Cookson moved with her two young daughters (one of whom was the actress
Georgina Cookson Antoinette Georgina Cookson (19 December 1918 – 1 October 2011) was a British film, stage and television actress. She died in Sydney, aged 92, on 1 October 2011. Family Cookson was the daughter of racing driver Roger Cookson and Sybil Tayl ...
918–2011 into Bolton House, a red-brick Georgian building on three floors in Hampstead, London, with the painter
Gluck Christoph Willibald (Ritter von) Gluck (; 2 July 1714 – 15 November 1787) was a composer of Italian and French opera in the early classical period. Born in the Upper Palatinate and raised in Bohemia, both part of the Holy Roman Empire, he g ...
(1895–1978), whom she had met through her friend Arthur Watts.


References


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* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Cookson, Sybil 1890 births 1963 deaths 20th-century British novelists 20th-century British journalists 20th-century English women writers 20th-century English writers English women novelists Pseudonymous women writers 20th-century pseudonymous writers