Antonia White

British author and translator
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Quick Facts
Born:
March 31, 1899, London, England
Died:
April 10, 1980, Danehill, Sussex (aged 81)

Antonia White (born March 31, 1899, London, England—died April 10, 1980, Danehill, Sussex) was a British writer and translator best known for her autobiographical fiction.

White made her mark with her first novel, Frost in May (1933), a study of a girl at a convent school. White drafted the book when she was 15 and published it after she had lost the Roman Catholic faith she was to recover later in life. Her lifetime output of fiction, small but distinguished, was deeply rooted in personal experience, After her schooling at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Roehampton, St. Paul’s Girls’ School in London, and the Academy of Dramatic Arts, she worked in advertising and journalism. White became a newspaper fashion editor (1934–39), and during World War II she worked for the BBC (1940–43) and for the Political Intelligence Department of the Foreign Office (1943–45). She then resumed creative writing with The Lost Traveller (1950), The Sugar House (1952), and Beyond the Glass (1954). White also became a prolific translator of French, winning the Denyse Clairouin Prize in 1950. Her more than 30 translations include major works by Guy de Maupassant, Colette, and Voltaire. In 1965 she published The Hound and the Falcon, an exchange of letters with a fellow Catholic seeking his way back to the faith that recounts her own return to Catholicism.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.