Saturday, 14 March 2026
Josephine Tey Part I
Josephine Tey's real name was Elizabeth Mackintosh, and she was born in Scotland in 1896, her father Colin Mackintosh had a fruiterer business and her mother was a housewife. She did not go to University, as it was rare for girls in those days, but she instead went to a Physical Training college to become a PT teacher. She spent some years working in different schools as PT instructor and enjoyed her work. In 1914, she also did some VAD work when on holiday to "do her bit" for the war effort. She worked in England and also in Scotland.
In 1923, she returned to Scotland to care for her mother who was ill and when her mother died, she stayed on to keep house for her father. She had been injured in a gym accident before she settled to housekeeping, and decided to try her hand at writing.
Her first novel was about a Scottish regiment and then she wrote a mystery novel where she created her best known detective Alan Grant who is a police officer. She didn't write many novels with Grant as the lead character but she got good reviews. However her ambition was to write a play and she wrote one called Richard of Bordeaux under the pen name Gordon Daviot. It did well in the West End and she became friends with John Gielgud. She wrote several plays but they did not do that well and she went on writing novels.
M/F
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