Diana Gardner
Diana Gardner, born in 1913, went to Bedford
High School and Westminster School of Art and
afterwards worked as a wood engraver and book
illustrator. During the Second World War she lived
with her father in a cottage in Rodmell in Sussex,
where she knew the Woolfs and often visited Leonard
after Virginia’s death. She had begun writing
when very young, her first short story being published
in Horizon in 1940. Her collection Halfway
Down the Cliff (from which all but one of
the stories in A
Woman Novelist and Other Stories are
selected) was published in 1946. After the war
Diana Gardner returned to London and worked in
publishing as a reader and editor. Her novel The
Indian Woman appeared in 1954. From the 1960s
onwards she was a full-time painter working mostly
in pen-and-ink and watercolour: her work was frequently
exhibited until the time of her death in 1997
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