‘The Shell Seekers’ author Rosamunde Pilcher dies at 94
LONDON — British novelist Rosamunde Pilcher, whose family saga “The Shell Seekers” sold millions of copies around the world, has died, her agent said Thursday. She was 94.
Pilcher’s literary agency, Felicity Bryan Associates, said she died overnight at a hospital in Dundee, Scotland after a short illness. Her son Robin Pilcher told the Guardian newspaper his mother suffered a stroke Sunday following a bout of bronchitis.
Raised along England’s wild southwest coast in the county of Cornwall — the setting for many of her books — Pilcher began her literary career in the 1940s, writing romance novels for the Mills & Boon imprint under the name Jane Fraser.
The first novel published under her own name, “A Secret to Tell,” came out in 1955. She scored an international bestseller in 1988, when she was 63, with “The Shell Seekers,” which told the story of a bohemian family across three generations.