Edith Templeton
Encyclopedia
Edith Templeton was a novelist, who also wrote under the pseudonym Louise Walbrook.
Edith Templeton was born in Prague in 1916. She was educated at the French lycée in Prague and left the city in 1938 to marry an Englishman. Her short stories began to appear in The New Yorker in the 1950s. Over the next several decades she published a number of novels as well as a popular travel book, The Surprise of Cremona. Edith Templeton left England in 1956 to live in India with her second husband, a noted cardiologist and the physician to the king of Nepal. Her novel Gordonwas first published by Olympia Press in 1966 under the pseudonym Louise Walbrook and was subsequently banned in England and Germany, and was then pirated around the world. She lived in various parts of Europe and made her final home in Bordighera, on the Italian Riviera. She died in June 2006.
Edith Templeton was born in Prague in 1916. She was educated at the French lycée in Prague and left the city in 1938 to marry an Englishman. Her short stories began to appear in The New Yorker in the 1950s. Over the next several decades she published a number of novels as well as a popular travel book, The Surprise of Cremona. Edith Templeton left England in 1956 to live in India with her second husband, a noted cardiologist and the physician to the king of Nepal. Her novel Gordonwas first published by Olympia Press in 1966 under the pseudonym Louise Walbrook and was subsequently banned in England and Germany, and was then pirated around the world. She lived in various parts of Europe and made her final home in Bordighera, on the Italian Riviera. She died in June 2006.
Novels
- Summer in the Country (1950)
- Living on Yesterday (1951)
- The Island of Desire (1952)
- The Proper Bohemians (1952)
- This Charming Pastime (1955)
- Gordon (1966; republished under her real name in 2003)
- Murder in Estoril (1992)
Travel
- The Surprise of Cremona (Eyre & Spottiswoode 1954, Pallas Editions 2001 ISBN 1873429657)
External links
- Edith Templeton at Fantastic Fiction.