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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stuart Petre Brodie Mais (4 July 1885 – 21 April 1975), known publicly as S. P. B. Mais, was a British author, journalist and broadcaster. He was an author of travel books and guides, and had an informal style that made him popular with the general public.[1]

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Biography

Petre Mais, as he was known in his personal life,[2] was the son of Rev. John Brodie Stuart Mais, curate of St Margaret's, Ladywood, Birmingham and his wife Hannah Horden (née Tamlin). He was born at Ladywood, but raised in Tansley, Derbyshire, where his family relocated on his father's appointment as rector there in 1890.[3][4][5]

He was educated at Denstone College, Staffordshire, then read English Literature at Christ Church, Oxford (BA 1909, MA 1913) [4] After teaching at Rossall, Sherborne and Tonbridge, and Royal Air Force College Cranwell, he later worked for the Daily Express, the Daily Graphic and The Daily Telegraph.[1] A prolific author of over 200 books, he also broadcast for numerous wireless programmes for the BBC between the 1920s and 1940s. Mais was an ardent campaigner for the English countryside and traditions, leading walks for people who came for a day trip by train from big cities, often from London.

Mais worked as a journalist for The Oxford Times newspaper, and also for the BBC as a radio broadcaster, most famously on the Kitchen Front radio programme that aired after the morning news during the Second World War.[6] He presented Letter from America from 1933, 13 years before a similar concept was made famous by Alistair Cooke.[citation needed] He also presented a series on This Unknown Island.

One grandson is Evening Standard writer Sebastian Shakespeare, who wrote of his grandfather:

My grandfather, S. P. B. Mais, wrote more than 200 books and was a household name in his day. Prolific production alas was no guarantee of riches. He wrote to keep the bailiffs at bay. I'll never forget when my mother told me how she once had to hand over the contents of her piggy bank to his creditors.[7]

Personal life

In 1913, Mais married Doris Snow; they had two daughters: Priscilla (1916–1982) and Vivien (born 1920).[8] After their separation (they never divorced), he had a relationship with Winifred Doughty (1905–1993), who changed her name by deed poll to Gillian ("Jill") Mais; they also had two daughters.[9] After becoming dissatisfied with living standards in the tiny retirement home at Lindfield, Sussex that had been offered to the penniless Mais by the Samaritan Housing Association, along with Mais's refusal to marry her, Jill left Mais for a mutual friend, Dudley Carew, whom she married, and lived with him across the road from Mais, taking him meals.[10]

Death

Mais died on 21 April 1975 at his retirement accommodation in Lindfield, Sussex.[2]

Bibliography

Critical works

  • Delight in Books (1931)
  • A Chronicle of English Literature (1936)

Novels

  • The Education of a Philanderer (1919)
  • Prunello (1924)
  • Eclipse (1925)
  • Perissa (1925)
  • Orange Street (1926)
  • Light over Lundy (1938)

Travel books

These include:

  • See England First (1927)
  • Do you know North Cornwall? My finest holiday (1927 for the Southern Railway)
  • The Cornish Riviera (1928 for the Great Western Railway)
  • Glorious Devon (1928 for the Great Western Railway)
  • North Wales (1928 for the London Midland and Scottish Railway)
  • Sussex 1929
  • It isn't far from London (1930)
  • Southern rambles for Londoners (1931 for the Southern Railway)
  • The Highlands of Britain (1932)
  • This unknown island (1932)
  • Week-ends in England (1933)
  • Isles of the island (1934)
  • England's pleasance (1935)
  • Lovely Britain edited (1935)
  • Round about England (1935)
  • Southern schools (1935 for the Southern Railway)
  • Pictorial Britain and Ireland (ca1936 for the Anglo-American Oil Co – Esso)
  • England's Character (1936)
  • A.C.E: the Atlantic Coast Express (1937 for the Southern Railway)
  • Britain calling (1938)
  • Let's get out here (1938 for the Southern Railway)
  • Walking in Somerset (1938)
  • Listen to the Country (1939)
  • Highways and Byways in the Welsh Marches (1939)
  • Hills of the South (1939)
  • I Return to Scotland (1947)
  • I Return to Switzerland (1948)
  • I Return to Ireland (1948)
  • I Return to Wales (1949)
  • Little England Beyond Wales (1949)
  • The Land of The Cinque Ports (illus. by Rowland Hilder) (1949)
  • The Riviera – New Look and Old (1950)
  • We Wander in the West (1950)
  • Arden and Avon (1951)
  • Norwegian Odyssey (1951)
  • The Channel Islands (1953)
  • Our Village Today (1956)
  • Majorcan Holiday (with Gillian Mais) (1956)

Further reading

  • Mais, S. P. B. (1937). All the Days of My Life. London: Hutchinson. (autobiography)
  • Mais, S. P. B. (1953). The Happiest Days of My Life. London: Max Parrish. (autobiography)
  • Robson, Maisie (2005). An Unrepentant Englishman: The Life of S. P. B. Mais, Ambassador of the Countryside. Huddersfield: King's England Press.
  • Shakespeare, Nicholas (2013). Priscilla: The Hidden Life of an Englishwoman in Wartime France. London: Harvill Secker. ISBN 9781846554834. There are many references to Mais in this book about his daughter, the author's aunt.
  • Smith, Bernard (2014) [2004]. "Mais, Stuart Petre Brodie (1885–1975)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/46344. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

References

  1. ^ a b "Mr. S. P. B. Mais". The Times. 24 April 1975. p. 18.
  2. ^ a b "SPB Mais", Nicholas Shakespeare, in The Best Australian Essays 2002, ed. Peter Craven, Black Inc., 2002, p. 208
  3. ^ "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/46344. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ a b Who's Who Among Living Authors of Older Nations, vol. I 1931-1932, ed. A. Lawrence, Golden Syndicate Publishing Company, 1932, p. 267
  5. ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory, fifty-ninth issue, Oxford University Press, 1930, p. 845
  6. ^ For an account of these broadcasts see Calling Again – My Kitchen Front Talks with some results on the listener by S. P. B. Mais, 1941.
  7. ^ Sebastian Shakespeare, Being a writer is a poor choice of job, London Evening Standard. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  8. ^ The Collected Letters of Robinson Jeffers, with selected letters of Una Jeffers, volume two, 1931-1939, ed. James Karman, Stanford University Press, 2011, pp. 273, 280-1, 301
  9. ^ The Collected Letters of Robinson Jeffers, with selected letters of Una Jeffers, volume two, 1931-1939, ed. James Karman, Stanford University Press, 2011, p. 274
  10. ^ "SPB Mais", Nicholas Shakespeare, in The Best Australian Essays 2002, ed. Peter Craven, Black Inc., 2002, pp. 207-208

External links

This page was last edited on 29 March 2024, at 21:49
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