Annabel Davis-Goff Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Annabel Davis-Goff (born 19 February 1942) is an Irish writer. She was born in Ireland to Anglo-Irish parents. Her father was Sir Ernest William Davis-Goff; her mother was Alice Cynthia Sainthill Woodhouse. She left Ireland in her teens, and worked in England in television and film, before moving to the USA. She lived for a while in California, and then married and moved to Connecticut.She is best known for her family memoir Walled Gardens (1989). She has published several more books since, including The Dower House (1997), This Cold Country (2002) and The Fox’s Walk. She has edited The Literary Companion to Gambling and has reviewed books for the New York Times and Entertainment Weekly.She teaches in Bennington College and divides her time between Manhattan and Vermont.She was married to Hollywood film director Mike Nichols from 1975 to 1986. They had 2 children together: Max Nichols and Jenny Nichols.
Has written three novels about the Anglo-Irish life in the early part of the 20th Century. "The Dower House," "This Cold Country," and "The Fox's Walk" have all been named New York Times Notable Books of the Year. She is currently working on a new biographical novel. [December 2004]
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Teaching at Vermont's Bennington College on the literature faculty alongside her longtime friend Steven Bach. [September 2004]