British writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lilian Fanny Gask (1865, Marylebone[1]–17 November 1942, Camberwell[2]) was an author of children's books. She was the eldest of six children of Charles Gask, merchant, and his wife Fanny, née Edis.[3] Her brother, Arthur Gask, was also a writer.[4]
In 1891, she was recorded in the England and Wales Census as being employed as a "pupil nurse" in London.[5]
In 1904, her first book, Dog Tales, was published. This was the first of about thirty books published during her lifetime. She frequently collaborated with Dorothy Hardy, a noted animal and equine illustrator.
In a review of True Stories about Horses published in The Spectator it was stated that "some of Miss Lilian Gask's 'True Stories about Horses' are almost incredible, and all are gently sentimental. But they are pleasantly written, and the illustrations, by Mr. Patten Wilson, are spirited and delicate."[6]
Compiled from entries in the catalogue of the British Library[7] and Who's Who in Literature, 1927 edition[8]
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