May Christie (October 3, 1890 – February 16, 1946) was a British-American writer and journalist, born in China to Scottish parents.
Early life
Elizabeth May Christie was born in China, the daughter of
Dugald Christie and Elizabeth Hastie Smith. Her father was a medical missionary at Mukden (now
Shenyang). She was raised in Scotland and attended the
University of Edinburgh, where she earned a master's degree in English literature.[1]
Career
Christie's fiction included romance novels, short stories, and serials for magazines. Among her longform works were Helene's Married Life, The Marriage of Anne, (1920) Love's Gamble (1920), For Love of Betty (1921),[2]The Eternal Eve (1923), The Rebel Bride (1925),[3]The Gilded Rose (1925),[4][5]The Garden of Desire (1926),[6]Eager Love (1928),[7]Man Madness (1929), The Jazz Widow (1930),[8]A Kiss for Corinna (1930), Love's Miracle (1930),[9]Flirting Wives (1931),[10]Tomorrow Will Be Lovely (1936),[11]Women in Love (1938),[12]Honeymoon Preferred (1940), and That Man is Mine (1942).
Christie moved to California to write for the film industry. She wrote the English subtitles for an Italian film comedy, Amo te sola (I Love You Only, 1936).[12]
Personal life
May Christie married Alexander Elsden Martin, a captain in the British army, in 1920.[16] She married John Mazzavini, a stockbroker, in 1927. She died by suicide in 1946, aged 55, in Los Angeles, California.[17][18]