Joan Aiken was a British short story writer and novelist who specialized in children and adult literature
@Writers, Timeline and Childhood
Joan Aiken was a British short story writer and novelist who specialized in children and adult literature
Joan Aiken born at
In 1945, she tied the nuptial knot with Ronald George Brown, a journalist by profession who took worked for UNIC. The couple was blessed with two children. Tragically Brown passed away in 1955.
In 1976, she married New York landscape painter and teacher, Julius Goldstein. The two divided their time between Petworth, West Sussex and New York. In 2001, Goldstein too passed away.
She breathed her last on January 4, 2004 at the age of 79. She was survived by her two children.
Joan Aiken was born as Joan Delano Aiken to Conrad Aiken and Jessie MacDonald on September 4, 1924 in Mermaid Street, Rye, East Sussex. She was the third child and second daughter of the couple.
While her father was an established poet and American Pulitzer Prize winner, her mother was a Master’s graduate from Radcliffe College. Both her elder brother and sister were writers too.
Her parents divorced in 1929. Following their separation, her mother married an English writer Martin Armstrong, while her father tied the knot twice. Young Aiken and her siblings stayed with her mother.
She gained her early education from her mother, who trained her academically until she turned twelve. Later on, from 1936 to 1940, she studied at Wychwood School for Girls in Oxford. She did not enrol at the university.
Having a family legacy of writers with her parents and siblings all tuning into the profession, it was only natural for young Aiken to join the bandwagon. She turned to writing at a young age.
By the age of sixteen, she had already penned her first full-length novel and the following year, had her first short story for adults printed in a publication. It was in 1941 that her first children’s story was broadcasted on the BBC’s Children’s Hour.
From 1943 to 1949, she worked for United Nations Information Centre in London as a librarian.
In 1955, following the sudden demise of her husband, she joined the magazine, Argosy.
At Argosy, she took up various profiles and worked in the editorial department in several capacities. Furthermore, it was at Argosy that she learned the small little nuances of writing, which helped her turn into a professional writer.
For her significant contribution to children and adult literature, she was conferred with two prestigious awards in her life, the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize in 1969 and the Edgar Allan Poe Award in 1972.
She made it to the runner up position for the Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, after her book was recognised as the year's best children's book by a British subject.
She was bestowed with the honorary title of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1999 for her service as a children’s short story writer and novelist.