Robin Stevens (author)


Robin Stevens is an American-born English author of children's fiction, best known for her Murder Most Unladylike series. She has spoken of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction as an influence on her work.

Early life

Stevens was born in California and moved to Oxford, England at the age of three. She has dual US and UK citizenship. She attended The Dragon School and Cheltenham Ladies College. Her father, Robert Stevens, was Master of Pembroke College, Oxford, and her mother worked at Oxford University's Ashmolean Museum. Her grandfather was the literary critic Wayne C. Booth.
Stevens studied English at the University of Warwick, later gaining an MA in crime fiction from King's College London. She appeared as Captain of the Warwick University team on University Challenge.

Career

Before becoming a full-time author, Stevens worked as a bookseller at Blackwell's bookshop in Oxford, and as an editor at Egmont.
Stevens started writing Murder Most Unladylike as part of National Novel Writing Month in November 2010, but did not send it to agencies for two years.
Stevens has cited the Golden Age of Detective Fiction as an influence on her work – particularly the authors Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Margery Allingham, and Dorothy L. Sayers.
In November 2020 she announced that she was to have a new book out in August 2021, called Once Upon a Crime. She also announced that there would be a new book, coming out in 2022. The Ministry of Unladylike Activity will star Hazel Wong's little sister and two other characters, Eric and Nuala. This new series is set during World War II.

''Murder Most Unladylike''

Stevens's eleven book series Murder Most Unladylike consists of schoolgirl detectives, Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells, as they solve murders. The series is set in the 1930s in England.

Works

Series

The Murder Most Unladylike Series

Standalone

Contributor

  • Mystery and Mayhem: Twelve Deliciously Intriguing Mysteries
  • ''Return to Wonderland: Stories Inspired by Lewis Carroll's Alice''