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Rose Macaulay (1881-1958) was born at Rugby where her father was an assistant master, but much of her childhood was spent in Varazze, near Genoa. She read History at Somerville, Oxford. Her writing career spanned fifty years, beginning in 1906 with the publication of her novel Abbots Verney. When her sixth novel, The Lee Shore (1912), won a prize of £600, she moved to London and plunged happily into literary life. A member of the Bloomsbury group, elected fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, she was made a Dame for her services to literature in 1958, a few months before she died. Her most successful novel was the James Tait Black Memorial Prize-winning The Towers of Trebizond (1956).
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