
Emilie Rose Macaulay, whom Elizabeth Bowen called "one of the few writers of whom it may be said, she adorns our century," was born at Rugby, where her father was an assistant master. Descended on both sides from a long line of clerical ancestors, she felt Anglicanism was in her blood. Much of her childhood was spent in Varazze, near Genoa, and memories of Italy fill the early novels. The family returned to England in 1894 and settled in Oxford. She read history at Somerville, and on coming down lived with her family first in Wales, then near Cambridge, where her father had been appointed a lecturer in English. There she began a writing career which was to span fifty years with the publication of her first novel, Abbots Verney, in 1906. When her sixth novel, The Lee Shore (1912), won a literary prize, a gift from her uncle allowed her to rent a tiny flat in London, and she plunged happily into London literary life. From BookRags: http://www.bookrags.com/biography/ros...
Series
Books

The Towers of Trebizond
1956

Fabled Shore
From the Pyrenees to Portugal
1973

Dangerous Ages
1921

They Were Defeated
1932

The World My Wilderness
1950

Roloff Beny Interprets in Photographs "Pleasure of Ruins" by Rose Macaulay
1656

Staying with Relations
1930

Told by an Idiot
1923

They Went To Portugal
1946

Non Combatants and Others
1916

Keeping Up Appearances
1986

Life Among the English
1996

Potterism, A Tragi Farcical Tract
1921

What Not
1918

Pleasure of Ruins
1953

Orphan Island
1924

Personal Pleasures
1936

Crewe Train
1926