You are on page 1of 2

Accessibility Information and TipsRevised Date: 07/2015

Back
1 article(s) will be saved.
To continue, in Internet Explorer, select FILE then SAVE AS from your browser's toolbar above. Be sure to save
as a plain text file (.txt) or a 'Web Page, HTML only' file (.html). In FireFox, select FILE then SAVE FILE AS from
your browser's toolbar above. In Chrome, select right click (with your mouse) on this page and select SAVE AS

EBSCO Publishing Citation Format: MLA (Modern Language Assoc.):

NOTE: Review the instructions at http://0-


support.ebsco.com.library.metu.edu.tr/help/?int=eds&lang=&feature_id=MLA and make any necessary
corrections before using. Pay special attention to personal names, capitalization, and dates. Always consult
your library resources for the exact formatting and punctuation guidelines.

Works Cited
Lorenz, Janet. "P. D. James." Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2015. EBSCOhost,
search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip&db=ers&AN=89406163&site=eds-
live&authtype=ip,uid.
<!--Additional Information:
Persistent link to this record (Permalink): http://0-
search.ebscohost.com.library.metu.edu.tr/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip&db=ers&AN=89406163&site=eds-
live&authtype=ip,uid
End of citation-->

P. D. James

Last reviewed: January 2016


Born: August 3, 1920
Birthplace: Oxford, England
Died: November 27, 2014
English novelist
Biography
In the decades since the publication of her first book, Cover Her Face, P. D. James became one of the mystery
genres most popular and critically acclaimed writers, considered by many to be the heir apparent to such
enduring figures as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Yet while James used the conventions of the
traditional British murder mysterya murder or series of murders, a detective, and a group of suspects, each with
a possible motiveher novels are more firmly grounded in reality than those of either of her predecessors.
Drawing on her earlier career as a hospital administrator and her work in a forensic laboratory and the British
governments Criminal Policy Department, James gave her books a level of realistic detail that separates them
from the cozy, comfortable tone of many classic mysteries.

Author P. D. James. By Benutzer:Smalltown Boy (Diskussion) (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia
Commons
Phyllis Dorothy James was born the daughter of Sidney James, an employee of the Inland Revenue office, and
his wife, Dorothy. James was educated at the Cambridge High School for Girls and at the age of sixteen went to
work, like her father, in a tax office. After a brief stint as a stage manager at the Cambridge Festival Theatre, she
married Ernest Conner Bantry White in 1941.

White, a physician, returned from his service in World War II with severe psychological problems. His young wife
became the sole support of the family, which by that time included two daughters. Over the next thirty-five years,
James worked at various times as a medical administrator in hospitals and forensic laboratories, a senior-level
police department employee, and a London magistrate. Although her first novel was published in 1962 and her
husband died in 1964, it was not until 1979 that she retired and began writing full-time.

The majority of Jamess mysteries feature Scotland Yard investigator Adam Dalgliesh. Unlike the amateur
detectives favored by many crime writers, Dalgliesh is a professional, and his direct, understated manner lends
the books a gravity not often found in the genre. His success as a detective has led to his advancement over the
years from the rank of detective chief inspector to commander, yet the job has at times also taken a physical and
emotional toll. Dalgliesh is an intriguing character, a reserved, intelligent man and a published poet whose life has
been deeply marked by his wifes death in childbirth.
Two of Jamess novels, An Unsuitable Job for a Woman (1972) and The Skull Beneath the Skin (1982), have
featured a young female detective named Cordelia Gray, a resourceful and intelligent private investigator whom
many of Jamess readers hoped might some day marry Dalgliesh. James remained noncommittal on the subject,
although the two characters crossed paths briefly.
What set James apart from many mystery writers and earned for her a degree of acclaim and respect not
generally accorded crime novelists was the seriousness with which she approached her stories. For James, the
mystery genre served primarily as a useful format within which she was able to explore the complexities of human
nature. The raw emotions called into play by the act of murder and the complicated psychological factors that can
lead someone to commit such a crime offered James the perfect setting for her probings into the darker aspects
of the human psyche.

Most of Jamess books take place in relatively closed communities; James was fascinated by the many and
varied ways in which people interact in these settings and the emotions that this interaction inevitably calls into
play. In A Mind to Murder (1962), the setting is a prominent psychiatric clinic where a murder reveals the messy
and complicated intrigues lying beneath the clinics surface. Shroud for a Nightingale (1971) takes place in a
nurses training school, Death of an Expert Witness (1977) is set in a scientific laboratory, Devices and
Desires (1989) unfolds in and around a nuclear power plant near a coastal village, and Original Sin (1995) sets its
story in a London publishing house. The Black Tower (1975) and Death in Holy Orders (2001) take place in
religious communities. Each of the books depicts a community torn apart by a violent crime, the solution to which
lies buried in the intricacies of the relationships among its members.
James ventured outside the traditional mystery format for her best-selling suspense thriller Innocent Blood (1980)
and the futuristic The Children of Men (1993). It is her murder mysteries, however, that have established her
reputation and won for her a loyal following among readers and critics alike. In 1991 she was made a life peer by
Queen Elizabeth II. Acting on the conviction that a good mystery should also be a good novel, James brought
fresh insight and complexity to the conventions of the genre and established herself as one of its finest
practitioners.
In 2011, with the publication of Death Comes to Pemberley, her final novel, James once again departed from her
usual formula. For the first time, she decided to combine her passion for the mystery genre with her love of Jane
Austen, adopting the classic writer's characters and setting from Pride and Prejudice (1813) to produce a kind of
sequel with a suspenseful twist. On November 27, 2014, it was reported that James had passed away peacefully
at her home in Oxford, England, at the age of ninety-four.

Bibliography
Bakerman, Jane S. Cordelia Gray: Apprentice and Archetype. Clues: A Journal of Detection 5 (1984): 10114.
Print.
Barber, Lynn. The Cautious Heart of P. D. James. Vanity Fair 56 (1993): 80. Print.
Gidez, Richard B. P. D. James. Boston: Twayne, 1986. Print.
Herbert, Rosemary. The Fatal Art of Entertainment: Interviews with Mystery Writers. New York: Hall, 1994. Print.
Horsley, Katherine, and Lee Horsley. Mres Fatales: Maternal Guilt in the Noir Crime Novel. Modern Fiction
Studies 45.2 (1999): 369402. Print.
Hubly, Erlene. Adam Dalgliesh: Byronic Hero. Clues: A Journal of Detection 3 (1982): 4046. Print.
James, P. D. Time to Be in Earnest: A Fragment of Autobiography. New York: Knopf, 2000. Print.
Macintyre, Ben. Rev. of A Certain Justice, by P. D. James. New York Times Book Review 7 Dec. 1997: 26. Print.
Maxfield, James F. The Unfinished Detective: The Work of P. D. James. Critique 28.4 (1987): 21123. Print.
Porter, Dennis. Detection and Ethics: The Case of P. D. James. In The Sleuth and the Scholar: Origins,
Evolution, and Current Trends in Detective Fiction. Ed. Barbara A. Rader and Howard G. Zettler. Westport:
Greenwood, 1988. Print.
Priestman, Martin. P. D. James and the Distinguished Thing. In On Modern British Fiction. New York: Oxford,
2002. Print.
Rowland, Susan. From Agatha Christie to Ruth Rendell: British Women Writers in Detective and Crime Fiction.
New York: Palgrave, 2003. Print.
Siebenheller, Norma. P. D. James. New York: Ungar, 1981. Print.
Stasio, Marilyn. No Gore, PleaseTheyre British. Writer 103 (1990): 1516. Print.
Stasio, Marilyn. "P. D. James, Creator of the Adam Dalgliesh Mysteries, Dies at 94." New York Times. New York
Times, 27 Nov. 2014. Web. 28 Dec. 2015.
Wood, Ralph C. A Case for P. D. James as a Christian Novelist. Theology Today 59.4 (2003): 58395. Print.
Derived from: "P. D. James." Cyclopedia of World Authors, Fourth Revised Edition. Salem Press. 2003.

Copyright of Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia is the property of Salem Press. The copyright in an
individual article may be maintained by the author in certain cases. Content may not be copied or emailed to
multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users
may print, download, or email articles for individual use.
Source: Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2015, 2p
Item: 89406163

Back

You might also like