Essie Summers

Essie Summers

Essie Summers has written at least 51 books. Their most popular book is Through all the years with 1 save with an average rating of 4⭐.

They are best known for writing in the genres one, asdfsa, and Asdfsa.

mone, asdfsa, and Asdfsa are their most common moods.

Author Bio

Ethel Snelson Summers, well-known as Essie, was born on Bordesley Street in Christchurch, New Zealand on July 24, 1912. Her parents, Ethel Snelson (for whom she was named) and Edwin Summers, had immigrated to New Zealand from England exactly one year earlier. She had an older brother, Edwin and a younger brother, William. She grew up in a warm and happy home where reading and story-telling were highly valued, and from a very early age little Essie was making up her own stories. When a teacher read aloud "Emily of New Moon" by L.M. Montgomery, she knew then that she wanted to be a writer. When she was young she had red hair, like many of her heroines, and she has said that she had a very quick temper, which she later learned to control. Essie left school early for financial reasons and began work at Londontown Drapers and she did similar work for the next 13 years, until her marriage. Essie married William Flett, a minister, after a courtship conducted mainly by letters, and they settled into parish life together. They lived in various parts of the North and South Islands of New Zealand though they eventually settled in Hawke's Bay in the North Island. They had two children, William Temple and Elizabeth Lucia, and seven grandchildren. As a minister's wife and a mother, her life was very full, but she was still a prolific writer of short stories, poems and, for a time, a newspaper column. Finally, her husband told her that if she was to achieve her goal of having a novel published by the time she was forty-five, the time to start was now. With his help she was able to concentrate on her writing and had her first novel published the day after her forty-fifth birthday! She went on to become one of the world's most beloved romance writers and a strong supporter of other aspiring writers. When she had achieved some financial security with her writing, she and her husband fulfilled a life-long dream and travelled to Great Britain and parts of Europe, where she was able to visit many of the places where her ancesters had lived. She writes very movingly in her autobiography about seeing the places where her parents had come from and meeting her English relatives. Essie went on to use many of those settings in her novels. In all she wrote fifty-six novels and an autobiography, plus her family history, before her death in Napier at the age of eighty-six on August 27, 1998. She was predeceased by her husband in 1984. Many of her fans have travelled to New Zealand to see for themselves the country that she described so vividly in her books. Because of this Essie Summers was offered The Order Of The British Empire for her contributions to tourism.

Postscript to Yesterday
South Island Stowaway
Revolt - and Virginia
The South Horizon Man
His Serene Miss Smith
The House on Gregor's Brae
Not by Appointment
Season of Forgetfulness
Nurse Abroad
No Roses in June
Where No Roads Go
Through all the years
Caleb's Kingdom
The Lake of the Kingfisher
The Master of Tawhai
Bachelors Galore
Bride in Flight
The Bay of the Nightingales
Anna of Strathallan
The Smoke and the Fire
A Lamp for Jonathan
The Forbidden Valley
Daughter of the Misty Gorges
The Time and the Place
Beyond the Foothills
Come Blossom-Time, My Love
House of the Shining Tide
Heir to Windrush Hill
Summer in December
One More River To Cross
New Zealand Inheritance
Moon Over the Alps
Autumn in April
Design for Life
My Lady Of The Fuchsias
South to Forget
High-country governess
The Tender Leaves
Winter in July
A Mountain For Luenda
To Bring You Joy
No Legacy for Lindsay
Goblin Hill
Meet on My Ground
Return to Dragonshill
The Kindled Fire
Sweet Are the Ways
A Touch of Magic
A Place Called Paradise
MacBride of Tordarroch
So Comes Tomorrow