M.M. Kaye

Author details

Aliases:
Maria Margarita Kaye, Mary M. Kaye, Mollie Hamilton, and 7 others Mary Margaret Kaye Hamilton, メアリー・マーガレット ケイ, M. M ケイ, Mollie Kaye, M. M Kaye, Mary Margaret Kaye, Мэри Маргарет Кей
Born:
Nov. 19, 1908
Died:
Nov. 19, 2004

External links

Mary Margaret ('Mollie') Kaye (21 August 1908 – 29 January 2004) was a British writer. Her most famous book is The Far Pavilions (1978).

M. M. Kaye was born in Simla, British India, and lived in an Oakland, Shimla, a heritage property from 1915 to 1918. She was the elder daughter and one of three children born to Sir Cecil Kaye and his wife, Margaret Sarah Bryson. Cecil Kaye was an intelligence officer in the Indian Army. M. M. Kaye's grandfather, brother and husband all served the British Raj. Her grandfather's cousin, Sir John William Kaye, wrote the standard accounts of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and the First Afghan War. At 10, Mollie Kaye, as she was then known, was sent to England to attend boarding school. She subsequently studied children's book illustration and earned money by designing Christmas cards. In 1926, she briefly returned to live with her family in India, but after her father's death, she was displeased by her mother's pressure to find a junior officer to marry and so returned to England living in London on a small pension based on her late father's army career, augmented first by earnings from illustrating children's books and …

Books by M.M. Kaye