Anna Clarke


Anna Clarke was a British author of mystery novels popular in the United States and the United Kingdom. The novels belong to a subgenre known as the cosy mystery. Jack Adrian, writing for The Independent, says, "In classic 'cosy' territory the puzzle is all, and the sleuths, of both sexes, tend either to the genteel and spinsterish, or to be fussbudget busybodies with loud, horsy laughs and pushy manners." In many of Clarke's later novels, the sleuth is Paula Glenning, a professor of literature. Glenning has been described as "an intellectual who solves crimes with research, dialogue, and brains rather than muscles and violence."
Clarke began her career as a private secretary for the London publishing firms Victor Gollancz Ltd and Eyre & Spottiswoode and as administrative secretary for the British Association for American Studies. She began writing mysteries after a long illness that interrupted her career, and her first success as a crime writer came in 1968, when she was 49 years old.
Born in 1919 in Cape Town, South Africa, she was the daughter of Fred and Edith Gillams Clarke, both educators. Fred Clarke, later knighted, taught in Cape Town, then in Montreal, Canada, and finally in Oxford, England. Interested in economics, Anna Clarke completed a bachelor of science degree at London External in 1945. After working for publishing companies, she returned to school, completing a bachelor of arts via the Open University in 1973 and a master of arts at the University of Sussex in 1975.
Clarke was a member of the British Federation of University Women, the Crime Writers Association, and the Society of Authors. She married David Hackel in 1947, divorced in 1957, and died in 2004.

Mystery novels

As Anna Hackel