Susan Linda Margolis (née Wener; 5 January 1955 – 1 November 2017) was an English novelist. She is best known for Neurotica (1998) and Apocalipstick (2003).[1]
Personal life
She was the elder daughter of Donald Wener, an Inland Revenue tax inspector from East Ham[2] who had served in the RAF, and Audrey (née Dixon), a bank clerk and former nurse; her younger sister was Louise Wener, musician (with Sleeper) and writer. Her brother Geoff attended Cambridge and managed Sleeper.[2] She failed the eleven-plus exam, going on to a secondary modern school, but due to the encouragement of her parents passed the 13-plus exam and attended grammar school, followed by the University of Nottingham, where she read politics.[2] She trained as a junior school teacher, undertaking practice at a Church of England school at Headingley,[2] but due to a hiring freeze in Leeds went to work for the BBC alongside her husband, Jonathan Margolis, now an author and journalist with the Financial Times, whom she married in 1976.[1] Having been appointed the programme's Yorkshire correspondent, Margolis worked on Woman's Hour until the 1990s, following which she produced Neurotica and continued her writing career.
![](../I/Memorial_bench_for_Sue_Margolis%252C_Terrace_Gardens%252C_Richmond.jpg.webp)
She died of lung cancer, aged 62,[3] and was survived by her husband, their three children, and grandchildren.[1]
Works
- Days Like These (2016)
- Losing Me (2015)
- Best Supporting Role (2014)
- A Catered Affair (2011)
- Perfect Blend (2010)
- Forget Me Knot (2009)
- Gucci Gucci Coo (2006)
- Original Cyn (2005)
- Breakfast at Stephanie's (2004)
- Apocalipstick (2003)
- Launderama (2002)
- Sisteria (2000)
- Neurotica (1998)
References
- 1 2 3 Graff, Vincent (7 November 2017). "Sue Margolis obituary – Sharp and witty comic novelist who wrote Neurotica and Apocalipstick". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- 1 2 3 4 Margolis, Jonathan (23 November 2017). "Obituary: Sue Margolis". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- ↑ "Sue Margolis, writer of 'Chick-Lit' – obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 7 November 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2019.