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  1. Claud Cockburn (father) Jean Ross (mother) Sarah Cockburn (27 May 1939 – 28 January 2000), who wrote under the pseudonym of Sarah Caudwell, was a British barrister and author of detective stories. [1] Her series of four murder stories written between 1980 and 1999 centered on a group of young barristers practicing in Lincoln's Inn ...

    • Sarah Caldwell

      Sarah Caldwell (March 6, 1924 – March 23, 2006) was an...

  2. 28 de jan. de 2000 · Sarah Cockburn (1939-2000) wrote under the pen-name Sarah Caudwell. She was a mystery writer. The four books of her "Hilary Tamar" series are her only novels other than The Perfect Murder which she co-wrote with several other novelists, but she also wrote several short crime stories.

    • (16,4K)
    • May 27, 1939
    • Sarah Caudwell
    • January 28, 2000
  3. 9 de nov. de 2021 · The full catalogue for the Literary Manuscripts of Sarah Caudwell held at the Bodleian Library is now available online via Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts. Sarah Caudwell was the pseudonym of Sarah Caudwell Cockburn (1939-2000), a barrister who used her in-depth knowledge of property law and tax in her finely-tuned crime fiction novels.

  4. 6 de fev. de 2000 · Sarah Caudwell, the British author whose modest but ecstatically received output of three erudite and maliciously witty mystery novels led at least one critic to compare her to Oscar Wilde,...

  5. So Sarah Caudwell (1939-2000) plausibly explained in a conversation 15 years ago about how she came to write mysteries with a legal background. We were from different generations, but we were both lawyers, and although my career as a novelist had yet to begin, I had been commissioned by a professional magazine to write an interview-article about her.

  6. 19 de mar. de 1981 · Sarah Caudwell was the pseudonym of Sarah Cockburn (27 May 1939 - 28 January 2000), herself a British barrister and professor of Medieval Law. She was one of the first two female students to join the Oxfor Union and as legend has it, dressed up in men's clothes to protest against the Union's male-only membership policy.