Early life
Career
As the wife of British diplomat, she followed her husband to his postings in Peking, Vienna, Rome, Santiago, and Tokyo. In Rome in 1884, over the opposition of her mother, she converted to Catholicism. In 1889, her husband Hugh Fraser was posted to Japan as " Minister Plenipotentiary and Envoy Extraordinary (head of the British Legation) to Japan—a diplomatic ranking just below that of full Ambassador. before the establishment of full and equal relations between Britain and Japan which Fraser was, in fact, negotiating. A month before the signing of the final treaty, her husband died suddenly in 1894, leaving her a widow after twenty years of marriage. Still under her married name of Mrs. Hugh Fraser, she was the author of ''Palladia'' (1896), ''The Looms of Time'' (1898), ''The Stolen Emperor'' (1904), ''The Satanist'' (1912, with J. I. Stahlmann, the pseudonym of one of her sons, John Crawford Fraser) Haining (1971)Peter Haining ''A circle of witches: an anthology of Victorian witchcraft'' 1971 p220 "THE SATANIST Mrs Hugh Fraser Mrs Hugh Fraser (1864–1925). With the death of Queen Victoria and the end of her long and restrictive reign, a great many aspects of the social climate changed : not the least of these being in the world of literature. Of course, there had been the occasional outspoken writer... To close, then, I have selected the following story of Satanism with its quite chilling scenes and vivid descriptions of a black mass. "The Satanist", along with several other stories of the same period set the standards for today's occult fiction and can be seen mirrored in the tales of August Derleth, Dennis Wheatley and, ..." considered that Fraser's "The Satanist" was one of the stories of the period which set the standards for 1960s occult fiction and is reflected in the stories of August Derleth andPersonal life
In 1874, she was married to Hugh Fraser, son of Sir John Fraser and Lady Charlotte Fraser. Hugh, through his paternal grandmother, Isabel (Publications
* ''Palladia'' (1896) * ''The Looms of Time'' (1898) * ''A Diplomatist's Wife in Japan - Letters from Home to Home, Vol I - II'' (1899) * ''The custom of the country Tales of New Japan'' (1899) * ''The Splendid Porsena'' (1899) * ''A little grey Sheep'' (1901) * ''Marna's Mutiny'' (1901) * ''The Stolen Emperor'' (1903) * ''Letters from Japan : a record of modern life in the Island empire'' (1904) * ''The Slaking of the sword ; tales of the Far East'' (1904) * ''A maid of Japan''(1905) * ''The Heart of a Geisha'' (1908) * ''The Golden Rose'' (1912) * ''The Queen's Peril'' (1912) * ''Italian Yesterdays, vol. 1 and vol. 2'' (1913) * ''The Honor of the House'' (1913) * ''Seven years on the Pacific slope'' (1914) * ''More Italian Yesterdays'' (1915) * ''Her Italian Marriage'' (1915)References
External links
* * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Fraser, Mary Crawford 1851 births 1922 deaths 19th-century American women writers 20th-century American women writers 19th-century American novelists 20th-century American novelists American women novelists Converts to Roman Catholicism