D
D. K. Broster
2 September 1877 – 7 February 1950
29 works on record
Biography
Oxford University history graduate **Dorothy Kathleen Broster** used her academic knowledge to good effect in the creation of a series of historical novels which gained a considerable reputation for their accurate evocation of past times. Particularly highly regarded were a series of tales set in Scotland at the time of the Jacobite Rebellion.
The convincing authenticity of her writing is the result of painstaking research, a skill developed during the author's time at university and which served her well throughout her literary career.
Broster's supernatural tales are interesting and well-executed works of some originality. As might be expected, the author created convincing historical settings for her ghostly fiction but also gave meticulous attention to that essential feature of all effective ghost stories - atmosphere.
-- from *Shadows in the Attic: A Guide to British Supernatural Fiction 1820-1950*, Neil Wilson (2000).
Works

The Penguin Book of Horror Stories
1999

The Wounded Name

Child royal

The Flight of the Heron

Couching at the Door

The vision splendid

The gleam in the north

The yellow poppy

A Jacobite Trilogy

Almond, wild almond

Mr. Rowl

A fire of driftwood

The dark mile

These Will Chill You

The Jacobite Trilogy
Sea without a haven
Sea without a haven
1967
World under snow
World under snow
1966
Flight of the Heron
Flight of the Heron
1963
Gleam in the north
Gleam in the north
1952
"Mr.Rowl"
"Mr.Rowl"
1924
Ships in the Bay
Ships in the Bay
Sir Isumbras at the ford
Sir Isumbras at the ford
A fire of driftwood, a collection of short stories
A fire of driftwood, a collection of short stories
Ships in the bay!
Ships in the bay!
The captain's lady
The captain's lady
The happy warrior
The happy warrior
The gleam in the north, a sequel to The flight of the hero
The gleam in the north, a sequel to The flight of the hero
Chantemerle
Chantemerle
Sir Isumbras at sea
Sir Isumbras at sea