Sarah Caudwell
Sarah Caudwell was the pseudonym of Sarah Cockburn (27 May 1939 – 28 January 2000), a British barrister and writer of detective stories. She is best known for a series of four murder stories written between 1980 and 1999, centred on the lives of a group of young barristers practicing in Lincoln’s Inn and narrated by a Hilary Tamar, a professor of medieval law (whose gender is never revealed), who also acts as detective.
Sarah Caudwell | |
---|---|
Born | Sarah Cockburn 27 May 1939 Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK |
Died | 28 January 2000 60) London, England, UK | (aged
Occupation | Writer, barrister |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Education | University of Aberdeen St Anne's College, Oxford |
Genre | Mystery |
Subject | Law |
Notable awards | 1990 Anthony Award |
Relatives | Claud Cockburn (father) Jean Ross (mother) |
Biography
Early years
Sarah Cockburn was born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, the daughter of Claud Cockburn, the left-wing journalist, and Jean Ross, who was the model for Christopher Isherwood's Sally Bowles character of Cabaret fame.[1][2] Caudwell's three half-brothers Alexander Cockburn, Andrew Cockburn, and Patrick Cockburn are also journalists.[3] She was the half-sister-in-law of Leslie Cockburn and of Michael Flanders. Journalists Laura Flanders and Stephanie Flanders, and actress Olivia Wilde are her half-nieces.
She graduated in Classics from the University of Aberdeen, and read Law at St Anne's College, University of Oxford. She was one of the first two female students to be invited to speak at the Oxford Union, after her friends Jenny Grove and Rose Dugdale had dressed up in men's clothes to gain entrance to the male-only debating chamber and had subsequently canvassed support for female students to be admitted.*[4]
Career
On coming down from Oxford she lectured on Law at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth. Having been called to the Bar in 1966, she joined the Chancery bar and practised as a Barrister for several years in Lincoln’s Inn, specialising in property and tax law. She later joined Lloyds Bank, where she specialised in international tax planning and became a senior executive in the trust department. It was at this time that she started to write.
Fellow barrister John Tackebury praised her accomplishments at the bar: "As a woman, she had to have had a first-class mind to join the Chancery bar, to have built up a successful practice and to have become a senior executive at Lloyds....All these institutions were highly resistant to women at a senior level, and certainly to a woman who smoked a pipe."[5]
Personal life and death
She was a lifelong pipe-smoker, and inveterate crossword solver, reaching the final of The Times Crossword Competition more than once.[6] For many years, she lived in Barnes, London, with her mother and aunt. She died of cancer in January 2000 in London, England.
Writing
Hilary Tamar series
This series of four books, described as "legal whodunits", were written over a period of twenty years. Their primary setting is the top floor of 62 New Square at Lincoln's Inn, where four young junior barristers have their chambers: Michael Cantrip, Desmond Ragwort, Selena Jardine and Timothy Shepherd. While the last named only appears sporadically, taxes barrister Julia Larwood, who works in the adjacent premises, is a regular visitor and is in effect the fourth member of the group. These characters are in some ways thinly drawn (Selena is highly organized and efficient, Julia is clumsy and chaotic, Cantrip is casual and modern, Ragwort is elegant and conservative), never communicating in anything other than an ironic tone, so that even when they are in deadly danger the atmosphere remains uniformly light-hearted.
Acting as a kind of parent to the group is the first-person narrator, Professor Hilary Tamar. Professor Tamar, a former tutor of Timothy Shepherd, also acts as the main detective, although other characters make contributions to the eventual solutions. Professor Tamar is frequently physically removed from the action and is kept informed by a series of improbably long letters and telexes. This distancing is amplified by Caudwell's strategy of not specifying Tamar's sex and never specifying the reason for the strong bond which the character enjoys with the young advocates. The plots are intricate, carefully realised, and strongly tied to the locations chosen, these being Venice, Corfu, Sark and an English village. The author’s expertise in tax law is frequently brought into play, inheritance law being relevant to financial motives for murder. She was particularly popular among other legal professionals, including American jurist Robert Bork, who was once quoted as saying, "In my opinion, there can't be too many Sarah Caudwell novels".[5]
Other writing
Caudwell collaborated on crime short stories with Michael Z. Lewin and with Lawrence Block (and others) for The Perfect Murder.
She also wrote a play, The Madman’s Advocate, which was given a rehearsed reading in Nottingham in 1995: a study of Daniel M'Naghten's attempt in 1843 to assassinate Sir Robert Peel and the resulting establishment of the M'Naghten Rule as a legal standard for defining the sanity of a defendant in law.
Awards
Caudwell was nominated for the Best Novel award at the 1986 Anthony awards for The Shortest Way to Hades and won the 1990 award for The Sirens Sang of Murder in the same category.[7]
Bibliography
Hilary Tamar novels
- Thus Was Adonis Murdered (1981)
- The Shortest Way to Hades (1985)
- The Sirens Sang of Murder (1989)
- The Sibyl in Her Grave (2000)
Other novel
- The Perfect Murder: Five Great Mystery Writers Create the Perfect Crime (1991) (with Lawrence Block, Tony Hillerman and Jack Hitt)
Contributions to anthologies
- 2nd Culprit: An Annual of Crime Stories (1994)
- 3rd Culprit (1994)
- Malice Domestic 6 (1997)
- The Oxford Book of Detective Stories (2000)
- Women Before the Bench (2001)
- The Mammoth Book of Comic Crime (2002)
References
- Garebian 2011, p. 4.
- Isherwood 1976, pp. 60-64.
- Alexander Cockburn - CounterPunch.Org - February 22, 2001
- The Guardian Tuesday February 8, 2000, Sarah Caudwell - Witty barrister who turned her cases into crime thrillers
- Stasio, Marilyn (6 February 2000). "Sarah Caudwell, 60, Lawyer And Author of Mystery Novels". New York Times. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
- Edwards, Martin. "Sarah Caudwell". martinedwardsbooks.com. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
- "Bouchercon World Mystery Convention : Anthony Awards Nominees". Bouchercon.info. 2 October 2003. Retrieved 5 March 2012.
Sources
- Garebian, Keith (2011). The Making of Cabaret. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199732507.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Isherwood, Christopher (1976). Christopher and His Kind: A Memoir, 1929-1939. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374-53522-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- St James Guide to Crime & Mystery Writers, Fourth Edition; 1990. Jay Pederson (ed.), "Sarah Caudwell", pp. 162–63.