Susan Elizabeth George (born February 26, 1949)[1] is an American writer of mystery novels set in Great Britain.
She is best known for a series of novels featuring Inspector Thomas Lynley. The 21st book in the series appeared in January 2022. The first 11 were adapted for television by the BBC as earlier episodes of The Inspector Lynley Mysteries.
A separate four-part series entitled Lynley to be shown on BBC One began filming in 2024.[2]
Biography
Elizabeth George was born in Warren, Ohio, the second child of Robert Edwin and Anne (née Rivelle) George. She has an older brother, author Robert Rivelle George. Her mother was a nurse, and her father a manager for a conveyor company.[1] The family moved to the San Francisco Bay Area when she was 18 months old as her father wanted to get away from Midwestern weather.[3]
She was a student of English, having received a teaching certificate from the University of California, Riverside. While teaching English in the public school system, she completed a master's degree in counseling and psychology.[4] She received an honorary doctorate in humane letters from Cal State University Fullerton in 2004 and was awarded an honorary Masters in Fine Arts from the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts in 2010. She also established the Elizabeth George Foundation in 1997.
George married Ira Jay Toibin in 1971 and they divorced in 1995.[4] George is currently married to Tom McCabe.
Career
Her first published novel was A Great Deliverance (1988). It introduces Detective Inspector Thomas Lynley (in private life, the Earl of Asherton, Oxford-educated ); his partner Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers (grammar-school-educated and from a working-class background)[5]—both from Scotland Yard; Helen Clyde, Lynley's girlfriend and later wife; and Lynley's former school friend, the forensic scientist Simon St. James and his wife, Deborah.
Awards
George's first novel, A Great Deliverance, was favorably received by the mystery fiction community.
^George, Elizabeth. "Chapter 2". A Great Deliverance. As if a grammar school background and a working-class accent were social diseases that might infect him