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Ann Bridge : ウィキペディア英語版
Ann Bridge

Ann Bridge (11 September 1889 – 9 March 1974) is the pseudonym of Mary Ann Dolling (Sanders) O'Malley, also known as Cottie Sanders. Bridge wrote 14 novels, mostly based on her experiences living in foreign countries, one book of short stories, a mystery series, and several autobiographical non-fiction books.
==Early life==

She was born Mary Ann Dolling Sanders, nicknamed "Cottie", the seventh of eight children of an English father, James Harris Sanders (1844–1916), and an American mother from Louisiana, Marie Louise Day (1852–1923). Her father was a successful international salesman of metal products. In 1900, her parents took her and their other children on a visit abroad to Paris and Switzerland and Cottie, "born with an inexplicable craving for heights," was enchanted by the Alps and became interested in mountain climbing. The family continued to spend summers in Switzerland.〔Bridge, Ann ''A Family of Two Worlds'' New York: MacMillan Company, 1955, p. 168, 217〕
The Sanders family moved to London in 1904 when Cottie's father encountered financial difficulties. Cottie passed the entrance exams to enter Oxford University, but did not attend, instead staying home to help her mother recover from the death of a son. She lamented missing "the mental discipline and the serious scholarship a University can give." Intellectually, she described herself as "half-baked."〔Bridge, p. 215〕 By 1911, her father had lost almost all of his fortune, and the family moved into a six-room flat in London. Cottie went to work as an assistant secretary for the Charity Organization Society. She described herself during this period as "poor" but happy.〔Bridge, p. 221〕
In 1913, on a visit to Argyll, Cottie met Owen St. Clair O'Malley, a diplomat. They were married on 25 October 1913. The couple had two daughters and a son.〔"Lady Mary Dolling (Sanders) O'Malley Biography" ''Book Rags'', http://www.bookrags.com/biography/lady-mary-dolling-sanders-omalley-dlb, accessed 19 March 2013〕 The marriage was apparently not a happy one. She was described as "stormy, troubled, and troublesome" and "an unloved wife who made herself 'one of the best-loved of all women novelists' in the twentieth century."〔"EPS Review # 31 – The Ginger Griffin" http://www.schlakjer.net/reviews/031.htm, accessed 19 March 2013〕
A dust jacket of one of her books in 1949 stated that "she became the youngest member of the Alpine Club at the age of 19, with sixteen first-class ascents to her credit. She is a great gardener; she has an interest in and knowledge of archaeology rare in her sex; and she has deep learning in her own craft of writing."〔"Ann Bride: The Hatchet Job" ''Vulpus Libris'' http://www.vulpeslibris.wordpress.com/2012/05/1/ann-bridge-the-hatchet-job/, accessed 19 March 2013〕

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