Dorothy Dunnett Biography

Dorothy Dunnett Copyright Alison Dunnett

Dorothy Dunnett
Copyright Alison Dunnett
Dorothy Halliday was born on 23rd August 1923 in Dunfermline, Fife, the only daughter of a mining engineer, but grew up in the Corstophine area of Edinburgh.  She was educated at the James Gillespie School for Girls, and was a few years younger than Muriel Spark who based her famous novel The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie on the school.

Dorothy studied at Edinburgh College of Art, and Glasgow School of Art, and became a talented portrait painter. During the Second World War she worked as a Press Officer for various government departments in Edinburgh including the Board of Trade. There she met and married her boss, Alastair Dunnett.

Alastair Dunnett, 15 years her senior, became a distinguished newspaper editor taking the helm of the Scottish Daily Record, and then The Scotsman, a position he held for 17 years. After his retirement he became chairman of Thompson Scottish Petroleum, and was knighted for his services to journalism and to Scotland in 1995.

A singularly happy couple, Lady Dunnett said that her husband was the model for her most famous romantic hero, Francis Crawford of Lymond. The Dunnetts had two sons, Ninian and Mungo. Sir Alastair died in 1998.

Dorothy Dunnett was a housewife of 38 when she turned to writing. She said that after complaining to her husband that she had nothing of interest to read, he suggested she write something herself… the die was cast.

Her first novel, and the first of the six book Lymond Chronicles, was snapped up by the legendary American editor Lois Dwight Cole, who famously discovered Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With The Wind. This was followed by 22 other books. The world famous Lymond Chronicles were interspersed with a series of light-hearted detective stories featuring a be-spectacled gentleman sailor. Then came King Hereafter, a fascinating book that took Dorothy four years to research. In it she examined the ‘real’ identity of Macbeth, and came up with a theory which set historians aquiver.

Dorothy Dunnett’s final work – the gigantic eight volume House of Niccolo series – was set during the Renaissance, and introduces another extraordinary man, Nicholas de Fleury, as its hero. This time it was 15th century commerce and banking which had captured her imagination. The novels are filled with unforgettable characters, formidable women, dreadful villains, complex plot lines, hilarious set pieces, poetry, and music, all wrapped up in an evocation of history almost magically real. Naturally the books were best sellers.

The last of this series Gemini was published in 2000, and that year hundreds of people arrived in Edinburgh for a Dunnett convention. For three days Dorothy Dunnett was feted by men and women from all over the world.

But Dorothy did not dwell entirely in the past, far from it; she was a warm, funny and charismatic person with many interests. She loved – and created – art, sculpture and music. She was adept at languages, and was an enthusiastic traveller venturing from Scotland to Flanders, Russia, Iceland, France, Malta, and Turkey to name but a few, when researching her books.

She was also a member of the Board of Trustees of the National Library of Scotland, for 35 years a trustee of the Scottish National War Memorial, a non-executive director of Scottish Television and a director of the Edinburgh Book Festival… and the hostess of some fabulous Festival parties. Dorothy was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and was awarded the OBE in 1992 for her services to literature.

Dorothy Dunnett died on 9th November 2001 after a short illness, she was 78 years old.

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