Jane Gordon-Cumming
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Priscilla Jane Gordon-Cumming Osborn | |
---|---|
Born |
Priscilla Jane Gordon-Cumming 6 February 1950 |
Pen name | Jane Gordon-Cumming |
Occupation | novelist |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Period | 1987 – present |
Genres | Romance |
Spouse(s) | Edwin F. Osborn |
Relative(s) |
Katie Fforde (sister), Sir William Gordon-Cumming (grandfather) |
www.janegordoncumming.co.uk |
Priscilla Jane Gordon-Cumming (born 6 February 1950) is a British romance short story writer. She lives in Oxford, and is a founder member of the Oxford Writers' Group, and now its secretary.[1] She is hon deputy treasurer of the Romantic Novelists' Association.[2]
Biography
Gordon-Cumming was born on 6 February 1950, the daughter of Shirley Barbara Laub and Michael Willoughby Gordon-Cumming. Her sister Catherine Rose Gordon-Cumming, is fellow writer Katie Fforde. Her grandfather was Sir William Gordon-Cumming, and she is writing his biography. In 1991, she married Edwin F. Osborn.[3]
Bibliography
Single novels
- A Proper Family Christmas (2005)
Omnibus
- The Haunted Bridge & Other Strange Tales of the Oxford Canal (2009) (Includes: The Haunted Bridge, A Different Way Home, The Great Big Horrible Rat, Flying with the Angels, The New Lord of the Manor, The Death Trap, The Look Keeper, The Living Dead, A Conflict of Personalities and Landscape of Ghosts)
Anthologies in collaboration
- "Education in Action" in The Sixpenny Debt & Other Oxford Stories (2006) (with Lorna Pearson, Angela Cecil-Reid, Linora Lawrence, Gina Claye, Jane Stemp, Mary Cavanagh, Gillian Rathborne, Rosie Orr, Margaret Pelling, Laura King, Sheila Costello, Mary Cavanagh and Margaret Pelling)
- "A Little Persistence" in The Lost College & Other Oxford Stories (2009) (with Jane Stemp, Rosie Orr, Gina Claye, Charles Jones, Linora Lawrence, Chris Blount, Sheila Costello, Margaret Pelling, Angela Cecil-Reid, Gilliam Rathbone, Laura King, Mary Cavanagh and Ray Peirson)
- Loves Me, Loves Me No (2009)
- The Festival of International Art and Scholary Culture Oxford in The Bodleian Murders & Other Oxford Stories (2010) (with Alison Hoblyn, Sheila Costello, Margaret Pelling, Chris Blount, Jane Stemp, Ray Peirson, Linora Lawrence, Angela Cecil-Reid, Heather Rosser, Radmila May, Sylvia Vetta, Gina Claye, Mary Cavanagh and Rosie Orr).
References and sources
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