Gordon Glover
British radio producer and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Claud Gordon Glover (7 June 1908 – 1 March 1975) was a British writer, particularly for radio, as well as some novels.
Early life
Glover was born in Edinburgh in 1908, the son of William Gordon Glover (1879-1945), an engineer,[1] and his wife Florence Edith (née Hardie) (1878-1956). His grandfather, Thomas Craigie Glover, was an Indian railway contractor.[2] An aunt, Ann Liston Glover, married Lt-Gen Sir Frederick McCracken.
Career
Glover was a BBC radio producer and presenter.[3] One of his last radio broadcasts was an episode of The Countryside in Summer, broadcast in 1974.[4]
He wrote articles for The Country Gentleman magazine under the pen name of Julian Grey.[3] He wrote short stories and articles for various publications, including the Australian Woman's Mirror,[5] Lilliput,[6][7] the Radio Times,[8] and the Wireless Weekly.[9]
His first two novels were published by Geoffrey Bles, a London publisher with a reputation for spotting new talent. His son, Julian, described him as a "drunken journalist … hopeless with women".[10]
Works
- Cocktails at Six, (1934: Geoffrey Bles)[11]
- Week-End in Town, (1934: Geoffrey Bles)[12]
- Bolero. A novel, (1936: Cassell & Co)[13]
- Family Gathering. A novel, (1937: Cassell & Co)[14]
- Parish pump (by C. Gordon Glover as Julian Grey), (1975: Roundtree Press)[15]
- Tom Forrest's country calendar (compiled by Charles Lefeaux from the original material written for The Archers by C. Gordon Glover and Phil Drabble), (1978: BBC)[16]
Personal life
Glover married the journalist and radio presenter Honor Wyatt (1910–98) in 1931[17] at St Peter's Church, Cranley Gardens.[18] Before the Spanish Civil War, they lived in Spain for a while, where they befriended the poet Robert Graves and his lover Laura Riding.[19] They had two children, Prue and the actor Julian. They separated in 1939; Glover then had a brief relationship with Honor's friend, the future novelist Barbara Pym, in 1942 which he broke off abruptly and which traumatised Pym.[8] It prompted Pym to join the Wrens[20] and, when Glover died in 1975, she burnt her diary for 1942.[21]
He married, secondly, in 1946 the children's author Modwena Margaret Sedgwick (1916–96),[22][23] who had previously been married to John Allen, at the time an actor but subsequently a noted theatre administrator.[24]
He died in 1975, aged 66.[25]
References
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