Isabel Mary Mitchell
Isabel Mary Mitchell MBE (1893–1973)[1] was an Australian known for her services to literature.[2] She went blind in the 1940s and wrote about this in "Uncharted country [braille] : aspects of life in blindness."[3] She wrote eight novels after losing her sight through the use of dictaphone and typewriter.[4]
Mitchell also wrote three detective novels[1] under the name Josephine Plain.[5] The Secret of the Sandbank was first published in the Melbourne afternoon daily newspaper The Herald in instalments.[6]
Mitchell was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1970 for service to literature.[7]
Works
- Mitchell, Mary (1935), The Secret of the Sandbank, Thornton Butterworth
- Mitchell, Mary (1935), The Secret of the Snows, Thornton Butterworth
- Plain, Josephine (1936), The Pazenger Problem, London Thornton Butterworth Ltd
Family
She was the daughter of Edward Fancourt Mitchell.[8] Sister of Janet Charlotte Mitchell.
References
- Australian Dictionary of Biography
- SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, IST JANUARY 1970
- National Library of Australia Trove
- Described and Captioned Media Program
- Joseph F. Clarke (1977). Pseudonyms. BCA. p. 133.
- "NEW THRILLING DETECTIVE STORY -- FIRST INSTALMENT BEGINS TODAY". The Herald (17, 465). Victoria, Australia. 6 May 1933. p. 23. Retrieved 11 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
- Australia list: "No. 45000". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1969. pp. 35–40.
- Australian Dictionary of Biography for Edward Fancourt Mitchell
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