Fay Weldon: The Life and Loves of a She-Devil author dies aged 91

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Fay WeldonImage source, Getty Images

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Fay Weldon, pictured in 2009, was best-known for writing 1983's The Life and Loves of a She-Devil

Writer Fay Weldon, best known for books including 1983's The Life and Loves of a She-Devil, has died at the age of 91.

The author published more than 30 novels across her career, as well as collections of short stories, films for television, and pieces of journalism.

Weldon was born in the UK but was brought up in New Zealand.

She published her first novel in 1967 and went on to be shortlisted for the Booker and Whitbread literature prizes for her works Praxis and Worst Fears.

Weldon's witty, cutting and mischievous stories about the lives and loves of women often drew on her own colourful and turbulent private life and relationships.

Author Jenny Colgan led the tributes, describing Weldon as "formidable, fierce and wonderful".

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Weldon was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1979 and the Whitbread Prize in 1996

Weldon started out as an advertising copywriter, devising slogans like the famous "Go to work on an egg", before becoming established as a novelist and scriptwriter.

She had multiple TV and radio credits to her name, and in 1971 wrote the first episode of series Upstairs, Downstairs.

The Life and Loves of a She-Devil followed Ruth Patchett, a woman who sought revenge after discovering her accountant husband has been having an affair with an elegant novelist.

It went on to become a BBC TV series starring Dennis Waterman, Patricia Hodge and Miriam Margolyes. In the US, it became a Meryl Streep film simply titled She Devil.

Weldon's other best-known works included 1989's The Cloning of Joanna May, which was also adapted for the small screen and also starred Hodge, alongside Brian Cox and Peter Capaldi.

She said she deliberately wrote about women who were often overlooked or not featured in the media. Feminism played a prominent role in much of Weldon's work, although some of her views about women's lives meant her relationship with feminism was complicated.

She was nominated for the Booker in 1979 for her sixth novel Praxis. The Times critic Clare Clark recently praised it as her best work, saying the author set herself the task of "disabusing women of just about every comforting myth they might cling to, firing off savage truths as though it is a novelist's duty to break three taboos before breakfast".

Weldon told The Guardian in 2006: "Praxis was the book that made my reputation, but it was only because I had gone through the original draft taking out all the jokes that anyone took it seriously. I didn't do that again with any other book, and I've since been considered rather frivolous in some circles."

The writer was chosen to chair the Booker judging panel in 1983. At that ceremony, she gave a speech about how badly publishers treated their writers, which angered one publisher so much that he walked over and punched her agent.

Her Whitbread nomination came in 1996 for Worst Fears, in which an actress must face her fear of being cheated on by her husband.

Weldon also won the PEN/Macmillan Silver Pen Award came the same year for Wicked Women, a short story collection. She was also awarded a Los Angeles Times Fiction Prize, and was made a CBE in 2001.

In 2017, she wrote Death of a She-Devil, a sequel to The Life and Loves of a She-Devil, in which Ruth is now 84 and has made a world with "women triumphant, men submissive".

Weldon was also professor of creative writing at Bath Spa University and Brunel University.

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