British author (1923–2019)
Rosemary Jeanne Harris (20 February 1923 – 14 October 2019) was a British author of children's fiction. She won the 1968 Carnegie Medal for British children's books.[ 1]
Harris was born in London in February 1923, the daughter of Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris and his wife, Barbara Daisy Kyrle Money. She attended school in Weymouth , and then studied at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design , the Chelsea School of Art and the Courtauld Institute . She served in the British Red Cross Nursing Auxiliary Westminster Division during World War II and subsequently worked as a picture restorer and as a reader for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer . From 1970 to 1973 she reviewed children's books for The Times .[ 1]
For The Moon in the Cloud , published by Faber in 1968, Harris won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association , recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject .[ 1] The Moon was the first volume of a trilogy set in ancient Egypt , followed by The Shadow on the Sun (1970) and The Bright and Morning Star (1972). The book was also the basis for a 1978 episode of the BBC series Jackanory .
Harris died on 14 October 2019, at the age of 96.[ 2] [ 3]
Selected works
Egypt series
The Moon in the Cloud (Faber, 1968)
The Shadow on the Sun (Faber, 1970)
The Bright and Morning Star (Faber, 1972)
Orion series
A Quest for Orion (1978)
Tower of the Stars (1980)
Other
The Summer-house (Hamish Hamilton , 1956)
Venus with Sparrows (Faber , 1961)
All My Enemies (Faber, 1967)
The Nice Girl's Story (Faber, 1968); U.S. title, Nor Evil Dreams
A Wicked Pack of Cards (Faber, 1969)
The Seal-Singing (Faber, 1971)
The Child in the Bamboo Grove (Faber, 1971), illustrated by Errol Le Cain
King's White Elephant (1973)
The Double-Snare (Faber, 1974)
Sea Magic and Other Stories of Enchantment (1974)
Flying Ship (1975)
Little Dog of Fo , illus. Errol Le Cain (1976)
I Want to Be a Fish (1977)
Beauty and the Beast , illus. Errol Le Cain (1979)
Zed (1982)
Janni's Stork (1984)
The Lotus and the Grail: Legends from East to West (1985)
Summers of the Wild Rose (1987)
Love and the Merrygoround (1988)
Ticket to Freedom (1992)
Haunting of Joey Mbasa (1996)
References
^ a b c
(Carnegie Winner 1968) Archived 8 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine . Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP . Retrieved 2012-08-16.
^ Assheton, Thomas (28 October 2019). "Harris" . The Telegraph Announcements . Retrieved 2 November 2019 .
^ Hile, Kevin (21 July 1995). Something about the Author - Volume 82 . Gale. p. 85. ISBN 0810322927 . Rosemary Harris death notice]
External links
International National Academics People Other
WARNING: WorldCat conflates three distinct authors named Rosemary Harris; GND conflates two. See the article header. (2013)