Dame Beryl Bainbridge dies at 75
- Published
Novelist Dame Beryl Bainbridge has died at the age of 75.
The writer, whose works included The Dressmaker and Injury Time, passed away in the early hours of Friday morning after a short illness, her agent said.
Liverpool-born Dame Beryl was nominated five times for the Booker Prize and won the Whitbread novel award twice.
Dame Beryl's 1989 novel An Awfully Big Adventure was made into a film six years later starring Alan Rickman and Hugh Grant.
She won the Whitbread award for Injury Time in 1977 and, in 1996, for Every Man For Himself - which was also shortlisted for the Booker.
Dark themes
Dame Beryl began her career as an actress and performed in repertory theatre before she had her first novel published in 1967.
A Weekend With Claude tells the story of a violent, predatory man.
Dark themes continued with books including 1968's Harriet Said, the story of two teenage girls who seduce a man before murdering his wife.
A number of her books were set in her home city of Liverpool, including 1973's The Dressmaker - a tale of love and murder during World War II.
And 1978's Young Adolf tells the tale of a young Hitler working as a waiter at the city's Adelphi Hotel in the early 20th Century.
Dame Beryl's historical novels included 1984's Watson's Apology, a portrait of a Victorian murder while Master Georgie, published in 1998, was set in the Crimean War.
Her publicist Susan de Soissons said: "She was one of the huge doyennes of literature and everyone adored her."
Writing on micro-blogging site Twitter, author Margaret Atwood said: "Oldpal Dame Beryl Bainbridge dies - very sad. Wondrous original, great sport, loved her books. Hope she has champagne in heaven & a smoke..."
The novelist, who specialised in black comedy, wrote columns for the Spectator and the Evening Standard.
Dame Beryl, who in 2008 was featured in a Times newspaper list of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945, also wrote several television plays.
She was made a dame in 2000.
- Published2 July 2010