Barbara Taylor Bradford, one of the world's bestselling novelists, who captivated readers for decades with chronicles of buried secrets, raging ambitions and strong women of humble origins rising to wealth and power, died Sunday at her home in Manhattan. She was 91. She died after a short illness, her publisher, HarperCollins, said Monday.
Beginning with the runaway success of her 1979 debut novel, 'A Woman of Substance,' Bradford's 40 works of fiction sold more than 90 million copies in 40 languages and were all bestsellers. Ten of her books were adapted for television films and miniseries, and the author, a self-described workaholic whose life mirrored the rags-to-riches stories of many of her heroines, achieved global celebrity and amassed a $300 million fortune.
She was born in England into a working-class family whose grit inspired some of her stories. Her father lost a leg in WWI, her mother was born out of wedlock, and her grandmother once laboured in a workhouse for the poor. She quit school at 15, became a journalist, married an American film producer and lived for 60 years in New York. She was a self-taught novelist, publishing her first when she was 46.
Exploiting exotic locales and an arsenal of steamy liaisons, mysterious deaths and feasts of betrayal and scandal, Bradford spun tales of love and revenge, infidelity and heartbreak that lofted resolute women into glittering lives with handsome men, mansions in London or Manhattan and the board rooms of global corporations. Empires were born in her pages, and sequels turned into dynasties.
Her output was prodigious: eight books in the Emma Harte Saga, - the latest was 'A Man of Honour' (2021) - spanning generations of the family of her first heroine, a servant girl who rises to forge a global department-store chain; the Ravenscar Trilogy, the epic of a family business empire in Edwardian England; and dozens of stand-alone novels with evocative titles like 'Voice of the Heart' (1983), 'Her Own Rules' (1996) and 'The Triumph of Katie Byrne' (2001).
As her career unfolded, Bradford became an American citizen in 1992 and received honorary degrees and awards, including the Order of the British Empire from Queen Elizabeth II in 2007. Her image even appeared on a postage stamp in 1999.