Rosalind Miles
Rosalind Miles (born Rosalind Mary Simpson on January 6, 1943) is an English author, who has written 23 works of fiction and non-fiction. She has two grown children, and is married to the historian Robin Cross.[1]
Life and career[]
She was born in Warwickshire, the youngest of three sisters. As a child, Miles suffered from polio, which she acquired at the age of four.[citation needed] Due to it, she had to undergo several months of treatment. From the age of ten, Miles attended the King Edward VI High School for Girls,[1] where she obtained a working knowledge of Latin and Greek, along with a lifelong love of Shakespeare. At seventeen, she was accepted at St Hilda's College, Oxford,[2] where she studied English literature, Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, Latin and French. There, she was awarded the Eleanor Rooke Memorial Prize, the Principal's Prize of St Hilda's College, as well as a State Studentship Award. She obtained five degrees in all, including an MA and Ph.D. from the Shakespeare Institute at the University of Birmingham, as well a starred MA* from the Centre for Mass Communication Research at the University of Leicester.[1]
Alongside her studies, Miles worked in several occupations, including working as a travelling saleswoman and a stable hand. She got her first job, in a plastics factory, at the age of 13.[3] Miles later became interested in jurisprudence, which resulted in her appointment at the age of 26 as a lay magistrate in the Warwickshire criminal and family courts, and eventually on the bench in a superior court in Coventry. She served for ten years, and rose to the level of Crown Court. Miles has also worked with numerous government agencies and served on consultative committees.[1]
In addition to novelist, Miles is also a journalist and broadcaster. She began her broadcasting career on the BBC, for which she is now a regular commentator. She also broadcasts on Canadian radio, as well as numerous local radio stations. She has made many television appearances as a historian and commentator, including on CNN, PBS, and CBS. As a journalist, her work has appeared in major newspapers across the English-speaking world, including The Washington Post. Miles is also a major contributor to a number of magazines, including Prospect and Cosmopolitan.[1]
Works[]
Non-fiction[]
- The Fiction of Sex: Themes and Functions of Sex Difference in the Modern Novel
- The Problem of Measure for Measure
- Ben Jonson: His Life and Work
- Ben Jonson: His Craft and Art
- The Female Form: Women Writers and the Conquest of the Novel
- Danger! Men At Work
- Modest Proposals
- Women and Power
- The Women's History of the World (US: Who Cooked the Last Supper)
- The Rites of Man: Love, Sex and Death in the Making of the Male (US: Love, Sex and Death and the Making of the Male) (1991)
- The Children We Deserve: Love and Hate in the Making of the Family
With Robin Cross:
- Hell Hath No Fury: True Stories of Women at War from Antiquity to Iraq
- Warrior Women: 3000 Years of Courage and Heroism
Fiction[]
- Return to Eden
- Bitter Legacy
- Prodigal Sins
- Act of Passion
- I, Elizabeth: the Word of a Queen Reader's Guide
- The Guenevere trilogy: Reader's Guide
- The Isolde trilogy:
- The Queen of the Western Isle
- The Maid of the White Hands
- The Lady of the Sea
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Biography", Rosalind Miles. Accessed 26 Dec 2014
- ^ "The lusty ways of St Hilda", The Independent, 19 March 1997. Accessed 22 Sept 2014
- ^ "Rosalind Miles". Veronika Asks: Author Interviews (Interview). Interviewed by Veronika Asks. 14 September 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
External links[]
- 1943 births
- British literary critics
- Women literary critics
- 20th-century English novelists
- 21st-century English novelists
- English historical novelists
- Writers of historical fiction set in the Middle Ages
- Alumni of St Hilda's College, Oxford
- Alumni of the University of Birmingham
- Living people