Background
Fuller, Jean Violet Overton was born on March 7, 1915 in Iver Heath, United Kingdom. Daughter of John Henry and Violet Overton (Smith) Fuller.
(Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-gre...)
Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-great-great grand-daughter of the Tiger of Mysore, and the daughter of the Sufi teacher Inayat Khan, who founded the Sufi movement and Sufi Order in the West. When war broke out, in 1939, she was already achieving her first successes, As a harpist she had been heard at the Salle Erard. Her stories were appearing on the children's page of 'Le Figaro' and broadcast on Radiodiffusion Francaise, her 'Twenty Jataka Tales' being brought out by a London publisher; she was just founding a children's newspaper. Later she was betrayed to the Sicherheitsdienst and as a prisoner of importance was held at their HQ on the Avenue Foch. After a daring attempt to escape, via the roof, she refused to give parole and was sent to Germany, where she was kept for most of the time in chains, before being shot at Dachau. She was posthumously awarded the George Cross and the Crois de Guerre.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0856920673/?tag=2022091-20
(In the autumn of 1888 London women lived under the shadow...)
In the autumn of 1888 London women lived under the shadow of the Ripper murders - killings perhaps unmatched in their sadistic brutality. Sickert & the Ripper Crimes derives from the unsuspected testimony of the woman who had particular reason to fear for her life. In the autumn of 1888 London women lived under the shadow of the Ripper murders - killings perhaps unmatched in their sadistic brutality. Sickert & the Ripper Crimes derives from the unsuspected testimony of the woman who had particular reason to fear for her life. Florence Pash, friend and colleague of the artist Walter Sickert and herself an artist, confided to the author's mother when in her late eighties, a terrible story that she had kept even from those closest to her. She and Sickert had both known Mary Kelly, the last woman to be brutally murdered by the Ripper - and Sickert had warned her that, because she knew what Mary Kelly knew, she could become, if she ever began to talk, the Ripper's next victim. Sickert told Florence that he was painting into his pictures clues to the murders as he wished people to know the truth after his death. Jean Overton Fuller using her artist's eye, has picked them out and read the riddle.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1869928644/?tag=2022091-20
(In the autumn of 1888, London women lived under the shado...)
In the autumn of 1888, London women lived under the shadow of the Ripper murders-killings perhaps unmatched in their sadistic brutality. Sickert & The Ripper Crimes derives from the unsuspected testimony of the woman who had particular reason to fear for her life. Florence Pash, friend and colleague of the artist Walter Sickert and herself an artist, confided to the author’s mother when in her late eighties, a terrible story that she had kept even from those closest to her. ‘timely and welcome…remains a curious and important book’ - Paul Begg in Ripperologist, April 2002
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009SPTVH6/?tag=2022091-20
(Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-gre...)
Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-great-great grand-daughter of the Tiger of Mysore, and the daughter of the Sufi teacher Inayat Khan, who founded the Sufi movement and Sufi Order in the West. When war broke out, in 1939, she was already achieving her first successes, As a harpist she had been heard at the Salle Erard. Her stories were appearing on the children's page of 'Le Figaro' and broadcast on Radiodiffusion Francaise, her 'Twenty Jataka Tales' being brought out by a London publisher; she was just founding a children's newspaper. Later she was betrayed to the Sicherheitsdienst and as a prisoner of importance was held at their HQ on the Avenue Foch. After a daring attempt to escape, via the roof, she refused to give parole and was sent to Germany, where she was kept for most of the time in chains, before being shot at Dachau. She was posthumously awarded the George Cross and the Crois de Guerre.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0856920673/?tag=2022091-20
Fuller, Jean Violet Overton was born on March 7, 1915 in Iver Heath, United Kingdom. Daughter of John Henry and Violet Overton (Smith) Fuller.
Bachelor of Arts with honors, U.London, 1945. Examiner postal censorship Ministry of Information, 1941-1945;founding director Fuller d'Arch Smith Ltd., London, since 1969. Author: Madeleine, 1952, The Starr Affair, 1954, Double Webs, 1958, Horoscope for a Double Agent, 1960, Venus Protected, 1964, The Magical Dilemma of Victor Neuburg, 1965, Carthage and the Midnight Sun, 1966, Shelley,1968, African Violets, 1968, Swinburne, 1968, Darun and Pitar, 1970,Tintagel, 1970, Noor-Un-Nisa Inayat Khan, 1971, Conversations with aCaptor, 1973, The German Penetration of S.O.E., 1975, Shiva's Dance,1979, Sir Francis Bacon, 1981, That the Gods May Remember, 1982, TheComte de Saint-Germain, 1988, Déricourt, The Chequered Spy, 1989,Blavatsky and Her Teachers, 1988, Sickert and the Ripper Crimes, 1991, Cats and Other Immortals, 1992, The Bombed Years, 1995, Plecotus Auritus, 1996.
Illustrator (poems) Meeting the Snowy North Again (Martin Booth), 1982. Co-winner Manifold Chapbook, 1968. Winner Manifold Poems of the Decade Competition, 1970.
Examiner postal censorship Ministry of Information, 1941—1945. Founding director Fuller d'Arch Smith Ltd., London, since 1969.
(Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-gre...)
(Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan was a gentle girl, the great-gre...)
(In the autumn of 1888 London women lived under the shadow...)
(In the autumn of 1888, London women lived under the shado...)
(A new biography on an extraordinary woman, co-founder of ...)
Author: Madeleine, 1952, The Starr Affair, 1954, Double Webs, 1958, Horoscope for a Double Agent, 1960, Venus Protected, 1964, The Magical Dilemma of Victor Neuburg, 1965, Carthage and the Midnight Sun, 1966, Shelley, 1968, African Violets, 1968, Swinburne, 1968, Darun and Pitar, 1970, Tintagel, 1970, Noor-Un-Nisa Inayat Khan, 1971, Conversations with a Captor, 1973, The German Penetration of S.O.E., 1975, Shiva's Dance, 1979, Sir Francis Bacon, 1981, That the Gods May Remember, 1982, The Comte de Saint-Germain, 1988, Dericourt, The Chequered Spy, 1989, Blavatsky and Her Teachers, 1988, Sickert and the Ripper Crimes, 1991, Cats and Other Immortals, 1992, The Bombed Years, 1995, Plecotus Auritus, 1996. Illustrator (poems) Meeting the Snowy North Again (Martin Booth), 1982.
Member of Francis Bacon Society.