Gillian White (1945-2020; pen name, Georgina Fleming) was a British novelist and former journalist, several of whose works were adapted for television.[1]
Life
She was born on 6 February 1945 in Streatham, south London, and was adopted as a baby by Ted and Lily Smith of Wirral, Merseyside, where she grew up. She had a difficult childhood, was expelled from three schools, and ran away to London, where a social worker helped her to obtain a job as a junior reporter on a newspaper in Harlow, Essex. There she met journalist Ron White, and they married in 1967. In the 1970s they moved to Cornwall where they farmed. When her children were teenagers she began to write, and after publishing several books with Rainbow Romances in 1988 she published The Plague Stone in 1989.[1]
White's obituary in The Guardian said that "Jealousy, revenge, greed and despair motivated Gill's characters, and she also examined class conflict, dysfunctional families, domestic violence, poverty and lack of opportunity in society."[1]
She lived in Totnes toward the end of her life and died on 24 July 2020. She had four children, thirteen grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.[1]
Selected publications
White, Gillian (1990). The plague stone. London: Century. ISBN0712637494.
White, Gill (1990). The crow biddy. Century. ISBN0712639322.