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Portrait image of Josephine Bell More pictures Photo: Central Press/Hulton Archive via Getty Images (1956) Michael Gilbert (left), Josephine Bell and John Creasey at the first Crime Writers' Association dinner at the Criterion in London, 6th April 1956. (Photo by Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Bell, Josephine

Country/Region:
United Kingdom
Born:
December 8, 1897
Dead:
April 24, 1987
Genres:
Miscellaneous prose, Crime literature
Josephine Bell is the pseudonym of the British writer and physician Doris Bell Ball, the author of radio plays, serials, a large number of short stories, one work of non-fiction as well as sixty-four novels, forty-five of which were detective novels or thrillers. She was born in Manchester as Doris Bell Collier. Bell's father, a doctor, died when she was seven. Her mother remarried a couple of years later, but Doris did not get on with her step father, and is reported to have been relieved to have been sent off to the Godolphin School, a boarding school in Salisbury in 1910. In 1916, she enrolled at Newnham College, Cambridge. She took her degrees in medicine at University College Hospital, London, in 1922 and 1924.

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