Richmal Crompton
RICHMAL CROMPTON Lamburn, 1890-1969, the daughter of a
schoolteacher-curate, went to a Derbyshire boarding school,
to which she returned as a teacher in 1914 after having
read classics at Royal Holloway College. She then moved
to Kent to live near her married sister and was a much-loved
classics mistress at Bromley High School. She published
her first short story in 1918 (using her mother's maiden
name); after polio left her lame she became a writer full
time. The first of the popular William books appeared in
1922. For the next 45 years she was always at work on two
books simultaneously, one for children (generally a William
book) and one for adults. In Richmal Crompton's lifetime
thirty collections of William stories sold over eight million
copies; but she once hinted that her 'Frankenstein's Monster'
had ambushed recognition for her forty serious novels,
of which Family Roundabout (1948) is perhaps
the best. |