Stuart Petre Brodie Mais (4 July 1885 – 21 April 1975), known publicly as S. P. B. Mais, was a British author, journalist and broadcaster. He was an author of travel books and guides, and had an informal style that made him popular with the general public.[1]
Biography
Petre Mais, as he was known in his personal life,[2] was the son of Rev. John Brodie Stuart Mais, curate of St Margaret's, Ladywood, Birmingham and his wife Hannah Horden (née Tamlin). He was born at Ladywood, but raised in Tansley, Derbyshire, where his family relocated on his father's appointment as rector there in 1890.[3][4][5]
Mais worked as a journalist for The Oxford Times newspaper, and also for the BBC as a radio broadcaster, most famously on the Kitchen Front radio programme that aired after the morning news during the Second World War.[6] He presented Letter from America from 1933, 13 years before a similar concept was made famous by Alistair Cooke.[citation needed] He also presented a series on This Unknown Island.
One grandson is Evening Standard writer Sebastian Shakespeare, who wrote of his grandfather:
My grandfather, S. P. B. Mais, wrote more than 200 books and was a household name in his day. Prolific production alas was no guarantee of riches. He wrote to keep the bailiffs at bay. I'll never forget when my mother told me how she once had to hand over the contents of her piggy bank to his creditors.[7]
Personal life
In 1913, Mais married Doris Snow; they had two daughters: Priscilla (1916–1982) and Vivien (born 1920).[8] After their separation (they never divorced), he had a relationship with Winifred Doughty (1905–1993), who changed her name by deed poll to Gillian ("Jill") Mais; they also had two daughters.[9] After becoming dissatisfied with living standards in the tiny retirement home at Lindfield, Sussex that had been offered to the penniless Mais by the Samaritan Housing Association, along with Mais's refusal to marry her, Jill left Mais for a mutual friend, Dudley Carew, whom she married, and lived with him across the road from Mais, taking him meals.[10]
Death
Mais died on 21 April 1975 at his retirement accommodation in Lindfield, Sussex.[2]
Bibliography
Critical works
Delight in Books (1931)
A Chronicle of English Literature (1936)
Novels
The Education of a Philanderer (1919)
Prunello (1924)
Eclipse (1925)
Perissa (1925)
Orange Street (1926)
Light over Lundy (1938)
Travel books
These include:
See England First (1927)
Do you know North Cornwall? My finest holiday (1927 for the Southern Railway)
^The Collected Letters of Robinson Jeffers, with selected letters of Una Jeffers, volume two, 1931-1939, ed. James Karman, Stanford University Press, 2011, pp. 273, 280-1, 301
^The Collected Letters of Robinson Jeffers, with selected letters of Una Jeffers, volume two, 1931-1939, ed. James Karman, Stanford University Press, 2011, p. 274
^"SPB Mais", Nicholas Shakespeare, in The Best Australian Essays 2002, ed. Peter Craven, Black Inc., 2002, pp. 207-208