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Celia Margaret Fremlin (20 June 1914 – 16 June 2009) was an award-winning writer of mystery fiction.


Life


Celia was born in Kingsbury, now part of London, England.[1] She was the daughter of Heaver Fremlin and Margaret Addiscott.[1] Her older brother, John H. Fremlin, later became a nuclear physicist.

Fremlin studied Classics at Somerville College, University of Oxford.[1] From 1942 to 2000 she lived in Hampstead, London.[1] In 1942 she married Elia Goller, with whom she had three children; he died in 1968.[1] In 1985, Fremlin married Leslie Minchin, who died in 1999.[1] Her many crime novels and stories helped modernize the sensation novel tradition by introducing criminal and (rarely) supernatural elements into domestic settings. Her 1958 novel The Hours Before Dawn won the Edgar Award in 1960.[1][2]

Fremlin was involved in Mass-Observation during the war, and published War Factory with Tom Harrisson in 1943.[1][2]

With Jeffrey Barnard, she was co-presenter of a BBC2 documentary, Night and Day, describing diurnal and nocturnal London, broadcast on 23 January 1987.

Fremlin was an advocate of assisted suicide and euthanasia. In a newspaper interview she admitted to assisting four people to die.[3] In 1983 civil proceedings were brought against her as one of the five members of the EXIT Executive committee which had published A Guide to Self Deliverance, but the court refused to declare the booklet unlawful.[4]

She was also involved with the Progressive League.[1]


Writing


Lucy Lethbridge has written of Fremlin's work that "almost all her novels centring round the home as the harbour of a particularly horrible, intimate, terror".[2]

Some of her novels have been reissued since her death.[5][6]


Death


She died on 16 June 2009 in Bournemouth.


Bibliography



Manners and Society



Novels



Collections



Poetry



References


  1. Kettlewell, Margaret (6 September 2009). "Celia Fremlin". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  2. Lethbridge, Lucy. "Celia Fremlin saw the impoverished disappointment in 1950s London". The Oldie. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  3. "The good companion: Celia Fremlin is fit, happy and still busy writing crime novels in her eighties. But when it's time to go, she's determined she will go. She has helped four people in extremis to die. And she doesn't see why, some day, she shouldn't do the same for herself - legally." Guardian, 21 June 1997
  4. "Striking Link between Suicides and Booklet", London Times, 19 April 1983
  5. Wilson, Laura (5 December 2014). "The best crime and thrillers of 2014". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  6. Wilson, Laura (16 November 2018). "The best recent crime novels – review roundup". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2020.



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