Hunter, Mollie (1922–)
Hunter, Mollie (1922–)
Scottish writer. Born Maureen Mollie Hunter McVeigh, June 30, 1922, in Longniddry, East Lothian, Scotland; m. Thomas McIlwraith, 1940.
Hailed as Scotland's most gifted storyteller, writes in a variety of genres including fantasy, historical fiction and contemporary realism, all set in native Scotland and frequently rooted in Scottish folklore; received New York Times' Outstanding Books of the Year award for The Haunted Mountain and A Sound of Chariots (1972) and Carnegie Medal for The Stronghold (1975); young-adult fiction includes Hi Johnny (1963), Thomas and the Warlock (1970), A Stranger Came Ashore (1975), The Kelpie's Pearls (1976), The Third Eye (1979), You Never Knew Her As I Did (1981), and The Knight of the Golden Plain (1983); also wrote essays The Pied Piper Syndrome (1992) and Talent Is Not Enough: Mollie Hunter on Writing for Children (1990).