Crime writer PD James passes away

The crime writer PD James has died at the age of 94.

Crime writer PD James passes away

The crime writer PD James has died at the age of 94.

The author, who penned more than 20 novels, sold millions of books around the world, with many adapted for television and film.

Among her best known novels include 'The Children of Men' and 'The Murder Room'.

Her agent said she died "peacefully at her home in Oxford" yesterday morning.

The novelist, who wrote a string of books about detective Adam Dalgliesh, spent 30 years working as a civil servant in England before becoming a full-time writer.

In a statement, James's publishers Faber & Faber said: "This is a very sad day for us at Faber. It is difficult to express our profound sadness at losing PD James, one of the world's great writers and a Faber author since her first publication in 1962.

“She was so very remarkable in every aspect of her life, an inspiration and great friend to us all. It is a privilege to publish her extraordinary books. Working with her was always the best of times, full of joy. We will miss her hugely.”

Among her recent work was a new novel updating Jane Austen's 'Pride And Prejudice'.

'Death Comes To Pemberley' pitched Austen’s characters, Mr Darcy and his wife Elizabeth, into the middle of a murder mystery, and was later filmed by the BBC.

A former governor of the BBC, James famously confronted its then director-general Mark Thompson during an edition of the Radio 4 Today programme about the excessive pay packets given to some of its top executives.

She grilled him as she took the helm as guest editor of the show, telling him it was “really quite extraordinary” that 37 BBC bosses earned more than the Prime Minister.

She listed Austen among the four authors she regarded as having the greatest influence on her work, alongside Dorothy L Sayers, Graham Greene and Evelyn Waugh.

Asked why so many successful crime writers were women, she said: “This may be because women have an eye for detail and clue-making demands attention to the minutiae of everyday living.

“Women, too, are interested in emotions and motives rather than in fast action and weaponry. It may be that women find the formal construction of the detective story psychologically supportive, so that we are able to deal within this structure with violent events which we might not so confidently tackle in the so-called straight novel.”

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