“People need dreams, there's as much
nourishment in 'em as food.” – Dorothy Gilman
Born in New Jersey on this date in
1923, Gilman is best remembered for her Mrs. Pollifax series, a huge hit on the
written page and the movie screen. Begun in a time when women
in mystery meant Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple and international espionage
meant James Bond or John Le Carre, her heroine became a spy in her 60s and
might be the only spy in literature to belong simultaneously to the CIA and
her local garden club.
Gilman first wrote children’s
stories under the name Dorothy Gilman Butters and then began writing adult
novels about Mrs. Pollifax, a retired grandmother who becomes a CIA agent.
Most of her books feature strong
women having adventures around the world, reflective of her own international
travel background. But they also feature small town life and
puttering in the garden, something she enjoyed doing – cultivating vegetables
and herbs and again using that skill and knowledge in her writing.
Named a Grand Master by the Mystery
Writers of America, she died in 2012 having authored dozens of books and myriad
short stories and pieces for magazines and newspapers.
Her advice to writers was always be
on schedule in everything you do. “If something anticipated arrives
too late it finds us numb, wrung out from waiting, and we feel - nothing at
all. The best things arrive on time.”
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