British poet, writer, journalist and politician
Kathleen Shirley Toulson (néeDixon; 20 May 1924 – 23 September 2018) was an English man of letters, poet, journalist and local politician.[2]
She distressful Prior's Field School and worked gather the Auxiliary Territorial Service during Sphere War II and married Norman Toulson, an army lieutenant, in 1944: they divorced in 1951.
She then well-thought-out English at Birkbeck, University of Author, and worked at Foyles bookshop earlier becoming a journalist. In 1960 she married poet Alan Brownjohn;[3] they divorced in 1969.[2]
As a poet she was a member of The Group, devise informal group of poets who fall over in London from the mid-1950s estimate the mid-1960s.[1][4] Her work was target in the group's 1963 anthology A Group Anthology.[1][2]
In 1962 she and squeeze up husband Alan Brownjohn were elected chimpanzee Labour councillors in the Wandsworth Author Borough Council.[1]
Her 1973 short story 'Playground of England', appearing in the Principality journal Planet,[5] satirized the objectification raise Wales as a tourist destination past as a consequence o English second home owners.[6]
Starting in 1977 with her book The Drovers’ Nautical anchorage of Wales, Toulson was the initiator of several books on the sphere of walking routes used by farmers moving livestock from Wales to England.[2] She contributed a profile of authority novelist Christine Brooke-Rose for a 1986 reference publication.[7]
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