Collectors' Notes: Collecting Vintage School Girl Stories
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Plodding through cataloguing a new (to us) batch of books this afternoon, I came across a vintage girls' school story by an author I didn't recognise: The First Term at Northwood by Mary Cathcart Borer. I wondered if it was part of a longer series, as so many school girl stories of that era were. Sadly I didn't find any more school stories (but they could be hiding beyond my ken) but I did find that Borer herself had quite a story!
Mary Borer, a Londoner by birth, started her working life as a scientist, employed at the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum as a senior researcher; but she gave up her job when she married archaeologist Oliver Humphrys Myers, and travelled with him under the auspices of the Egyptian Exploration Society to Luxor on the Nile. The marriage didn't last, but her experiences in Egypt inspired one of her novels, Taha, the Egyptian. Her first novel, Kilango, had been completed while she was still at the Museum, and another two followed before the outbreak of World War Two: The Highcroft Mystery and The House with the Blue Door.
She also worked as a film, script and scenario writer. During the second world war, in 1942, Borer joined Gaumont-British Instructional Films, writing propaganda films for the British Council and the Ministry of Information, her credits including Surgery in Chest Disease, Tom's Ride and Sports Day (1943-44). She was an occasional playwright too. Her most memorable play was co-written with Arnold Ridley, who achieved late celebrity status as Private Godfrey in Dad's Army, but who was, also a well-known playwright: Tabitha (1955) is a comedy thriller about three old ladies who plan to poison their odious landlady; the impulse to murder deserts them at the last minute, so they are somewhat taken aback when the old landlady dies anyway.
As the list of novels (below) reveals, Borer had enormous range and wrote for diverse audiences. She also wrote a number of non-fiction works, mostly later in her career. Perhaps the most celebrated on these is her Illustrated Guide to London 1800, which was published in 1988 by Robert Hale.
Mary Cathcart Borer is also sometimes credited at Molly Myers and, the IMDb database suggests, the somewhat more unlikely Egan Storm.
The Wellcome Collection holds a photograph of Mary Cathcart Borer. I think she looks feisty.
See all books by Mary Cathcart Borer at BookAddiction