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  • Title
    Gerda Charles Papers
  • Reference
    MS 4629
  • Production date
    c.1919 - 1995
  • Creator
  • Creator History
    Gerda Charles was the pseudonym of Edna Lipson, an Anglo-Jewish writer born in Liverpool in 1914. Educated in Liverpool schools until the age of 15, she then moved to London with her widowed mother, where they ran a boarding house. She studied further in evening classes at London colleges. Her first novel, The True Voice was published in 1959. A Slanting Light won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1963 and The Destiny Waltz won the Whitbread award for 1971. In 1991 Gerda Charles described her novels as being about 'the job of maintaining sanity, dignity and order' in the modern community. She also worked as a journalist and reviewer for papers including the New Statesman, Daily Telegraph, New York Times and Jewish Chronicle and in 1963 edited the anthology Modern Jewish Stories. She died on November 4 1996.
  • Scope and Content
    The collection contains correspondence with publishers, literary agents, fellow authors, journal editors, literary and other organisations, family and friends, as well as personal financial and legal correspondence. There are holograph manuscripts, typescripts and proofs of her published work, including The True Voice, The Crossing Point, A Slanting Light, A Logical Girl and The Destiny Waltz, as well as numerous short stories, reviews and journalistic articles. There are also manuscripts of unpublished work, including the novel Cornerstone. In addition there are press cuttings; periodicals, including those to which she contributed; papers relating to the libel action brought against her by William Goldman; papers relating to a visit to the USA; engagement diaries; booklets and pamphlets; photographs, and ephemera.
  • Extent
    412 files
  • Language
    English
  • Level of description
    fonds
  • Content person
  • Content Subject