Kinn Hamilton McIntosh,[1]MBE (20 June 1930 – 21 December 2024), known professionally as Catherine Aird, was an English novelist. She was the author of more than twenty crime fictionnovels and several collections of short stories. Her witty, literate, and deftly plotted novels straddle the "cozy" and "police procedural" genres and are somewhat similar in flavour to those of Martha Grimes, Caroline Graham, M. C. Beaton, Margaret Yorke, and Pauline Bell. Aird was inducted into the prestigious Detection Club in 1981, and is a recipient of the 2015 Cartier Diamond Dagger award.[2]
Life and career
Aird was born in Huddersfield, West Riding of Yorkshire in England. She attended the Waverley School and Greenhead High School, both in Huddersfield. As a young adult, she was bedridden due to a serious illness.[3] Upon recovery, she worked as practice manager and dispenser for her father's medical practice in Sturry, near Canterbury, Kent.[4]
Her first novel, The Religious Body, was published in 1966.[2] Aird was best known for her successful Chronicles of Calleshire, a series of crime novels set in the fictional county of Calleshire, England, and featuring Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan of the Berebury CID, and his assistant, Detective Constable Crosby.[2] She also wrote and edited a series of village histories, and was an editor and contributing author on works regarding other writers and the art of writing.
Aird served as Chair of the Crime Writers' Association from 1990 through 1991. She was awarded the CWA Golden Handcuffs award for lifetime achievement and the Diamond Dagger for an outstanding lifetime's contribution to the genre, in 2015.