Elizabeth Mavor (born December 17, 1927, Glasgow, Scotland—died May 22, 2013) was a British author whose novels and nonfiction works concern relationships between women.
Mavor attended St. Anne’s College, Oxford (B.A., 1950), where she worked on two popular Oxford magazines. After graduating, she worked for the magazine Argosy for several years and wrote fiction. Her first novel, Summer in the Greenhouse (1959), considered by some to be her finest, presents a woman’s lyrical evocation of a youthful affair. At the end of The Temple of Flora (1961), the heroine renounces her married lover but realizes the depths of emotion of which she is capable. Mavor’s third novel, The Redoubt (1967), is concerned with betrayal and regrowth; it uses shifting narrators and techniques to contrast the unhappy marriages of two young couples with the contented union of an older couple. In the ironic A Green Equinox (1973), the heroine embarks on sequential love affairs with a man, his wife, and his mother. The White Solitaire (1988) was published after a hiatus of 15 years.
Mavor’s nonfiction includes two historical biographies, The Virgin Mistress: A Study in Survival (1964) and The Ladies of Llangollen (1971), about two 18th-century Irish gentlewomen who ran away to Wales and lived together for 50 years. She also edited The Captain’s Wife: The South American Journals of Maria Graham 1821–23 (1993), as well as works by William Beckford and diaries of Fanny Kemble.