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Evelyn Everett-green




Her mother was the historian Mary Anne Everett Green and her father George Pycock Green was an artist; the family were Methodist s. During a year at Bedford College, London (1872 - 1873), Everett-Green wrote her first novel, and she continued to write while studying at the London Academy of Music. Her brother's death in 1876 meant the end of plans to go to India with him, and she occupied herself with good works, including Sunday School teaching and nursing.

In 1880 her first published work, ''Tom Tempest's Victory'', appeared, and though it was soon followed by more, she found writing at home difficult, and town winters did not suit her health. In 1883 she went to live outside London with Catherine Mainwaring Sladen, and in the 1890s and early 1900s they had homes in Albury, Surrey . In 1911 they moved abroad and eventually settled in Madeira .

During her time in Albury she wrote numerous historical novels, and fewer moral tales for the Religious Tract Society . Her novel about Joan Of Arc , ''Called of Her Country'' (1903), later re-published as ''A Heroine of France'', presents Joan as a feminine "Angelic Maid" in white armour whose inspiring adventures were undertaken in a dutiful spirit.

Much of Everett-Green's fiction was aimed at girls, but she also wrote boys' adventure stories, like ''A Gordon Highlander'' (1901). After moving abroad she wrote romantic novels for adults, often using the pseudonym Cecil Adair.


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SOURCES

  • ''Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction 1900-14: New Voices in the Age of Uncertainty'', ed.Kemp, Mitchell, Trotter (OUP 1997)

  • Hilary Clare, in the ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''

  • Penny Brown, ''Reinventing the Maid: images of Joan of Arc in French and English children's literature'', in ''The Presence of the Past in Children's Literature'' ed. Ann Lawson Lucas (Praeger 2003)



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