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Pamela Hinkson
Irish novelist (1900–1982), daughter of Katharine Tynan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pamela Hinkson (19 November 1900 – 26 May 1982) was an Irish writer.
Hinkson was the daughter of Katharine Tynan and barrister Henry Albert Hinkson (1865–1919). She was widely published[1] and her book, The Ladies' Road (1932), sold over 100,000 copies in the Penguin edition.[2]
Under the pseudonym of Peter Deane, Hinkson wrote The Victors (1925) and Harvest (1927) set during and after the First World War.[3] The identity of 'Peter Deane' was revealed by the writer Hugh Cecil following research into his 1995 book The Flower of Battle: British Fiction Writers of the First World War.[citation needed]
Her last publication was Golden rose in 1944.
She died on 26 May 1982 aged 81.[4]
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Bibliography
- The End of all Dreams (1923)
- The Girls of Redlands (1923)
- Patsey at School (1925)
- St. Mary's (1927)
- Schooldays at Meadowfield (1930)
- Wind from the West (1930)
- The Ladies' Road (1932)
- Victory Plays the Game (1933)
- Connor's Wood (revised and completed by Pamela Hinkson) (1933)
- The Deeply Rooted (1935)
- The Light of Ireland (1935)
- Victory's Last Term (1936)
- Seventy Years Young (Memories of Elizabeth, Countess of Fingall told to Pamela Hinkson) (1937)
- Irish Gold (1939)
- Indian Harvest (1941)
- Golden Rose (1944)
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References
Further reading
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