James William Broom-Lynne (31 October 1916 – 1 December 1995) was an English artist-designer, novelist (sometimes under the pseudonym of James Quartermain) and playwright who was notable for his illustrations for book jackets.[1]
Life
Islington-born Broom-Lynne was the son of James William Broom, a master bookbinder and Esther (née Slaughter).[2][3] As a child he attended Eden Grove and St. Aloysius schools, later going on to Saint Martin's Schools of Art. In 1948 he married Catherine Joan Redmore with whom he had two daughters (Victoria and Kate) and one son (Luke).[4][5] He also had one previous daughter, Gale (b.1940) with Joan Mary Murray (later the mother of novelist Lisa St Aubin de Terán).
Upon his death in 1995 he was cremated and his ashes laid to rest in the graveyard of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, in the village of East Bergholt, Suffolk, UK, where he and his wife Catherine had lived for over 40 years.[6][3]
Surname and pseudonym
It not known why or when James Broom choose to append Lynne to his birth name. It may have simply been to distinguish himself from his father with whom he shared an identical name. Although he signed his artwork and illustrations without the hyphen, official records show the correct form as a hyphenated surname. As a novelist he chose the pseudonym of James Quartermain for books published in the American market. This pseudonym is thought to have been derived from his grandmother's surname, Quarterman.[6]
Of Broom-Lynne's series of dust jackets for Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time Powell's biographer, Hilary Spurling, observed, that Broom-Lynne produced "a series of bold, grainy, instantly recognizable dust jackets that made Music of Time look quite unlike other novels."[7]
During World War II Broom-Lynne served as a warden with the Civil Defence Service in Westminster (1940–1945).[8] It was at this time that he may have first exhibited his work to the general public. Both The West London Press and Chelsea News and The Hampstead News and Golders Green Gazette record artworks credited to Broom-Lynne in exhibitions of civil defence artists in 1941 and 1942 respectively.[9][10]
Year
Exhibition
Artwork
Notes
1941
2nd national exhibition of civil defence artists
Portrait of senior warden C. Taylor
at the Cooling Galleries, 92 New Bond Street, London.[9]
1942
London exhibition of civil defence artists
"Mary"
address listed as The Studio, 4 Keats Grove, London[10]
His post-war career spanned both freelance and permanent roles.[4][5][6][3]
He created the book jackets for the first editions of all twelve novels in the sequence A Dance to the Music of Time by Anthony Powell.[11]
William Larkins Studio, London, England, art director, 1960–1961
Service Advertising, London, storyboard director, 1962–1966
In 1959 he provided the illustrations for a front cover of Punch Magazine.[12] On the occasion of its independence from the UK in 1981, he was commissioned to design the interior pages of the passport of Belize[13]
It was in 1960 that he took his first foray into commercial writing when he entered a competition run by The Observer to write an hypothetical broadcast script. His entry titled "Dixon in Disgrace" won first prize.[14] This was followed by a number of plays including The Trigon in 1962, which received mixed reviews although the theatre critics in The New Statesman,[15]The New York Post[16] and Newsday[17] were positive. By 1967 Broom-Lynne had penned his last play and shifted focus onto writing novels.
Bibliography
This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article's talk page.(May 2023)