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Irene Byers (born 1906 or 1907),[1] was an English novelist, poet and children's writer who wrote around forty books mostly published in the 1950s and 1960s.

Irene Byers
OccupationNovelist
NationalityBritish

Life


In her early career Byers worked as a freelance journalist specialising in interviews with famous people such as John Gielgud and Sybil Thorndike.[2] Byers gave up her career on marriage, around 1930, to Cyril Byers,[2] but took up writing again after her children were at school. She also wrote poems for her children during the war.

She was a regular contributor to the BBC's Woman's Hour and two of her books were serialised on Children's Hour. She also became an active member of the Croydon Writers' Circle. The circle provided support for her writing which was important as praise from her husband was rare.[2]


Works


Many of Byers' works were written for children, including books on nature study. The Tablet reviewed Byers' 1953 "The Young Brevingtons" in Books of the Week as:

"...a very good adventure story indeed, and with an unusual theme. The Brevingtons, an essentially country family, are transplanted at short notice to a slum neighbourhood where they join their mother in a rent-free house, but their surroundings are the greatest shock to them, and so are the children who live there... The children are real, and so are the problems, and intelligent young readers will enjoy a story which for once deals with facts and not only with adventures for wishful-thinkers."

Her 1954 book Tim of Tamberly Forest was broadcast as "a serial play in four episodes"[3] on BBC radio Children's Hour in 1955. The original novel was reviewed by The Spectator as:

"...the story of a boy who runs away from being sent to sea. Trees are his passion, and he eventually achieves his ambition to work in a forest. We follow him learning his job from the monotonous hoeing of seedlings to the sudden excitement of a forest fire. A rather trite storyteller's tone of voice and some ordinary characters (a gang of toughs, a poor lonely rich girl, an artist living in a caravan) do not take all the shine from a book that is full of the fascination of growing things, and of a particular vocation minutely, enthusiastically explored."

The Spectator, [4]

Her book Jewel of the Jungle was broadcast on Children's Hour in July 1956.[5]


Bibliography



Translations


Irene Byers' books have been translated into several languages, among them Dutch, German, Italian, Portuguese and Swedish.


Notes


  1. The Writers Directory, 1980-82, p. 184. This tallies with the year given in the National Thesaurus for Author Names (The Netherlands). UK records show that in 1932 a Cyril Byers wed an Amy Irene Cookson (born in London in 1907) in London.
  2. To Exercise Our Talents: The Democratization of Writing in Britain, Christopher Hilliard, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press (2009), ISBN 0 674 02177 0.
  3. "Schedule - BBC Programme Index".
  4. "Familiar Strange". The Spectator. 19 November 1954. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  5. "Broadcast - BBC Programme Index".





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