author
b. 1870
A Scottish-born writer of popular fiction for young readers, she built a career around lively stories of family life, adventure, and faraway settings. Her books include tales with Australian connections, showing a gift for making everyday childhood feel vivid and eventful.

by Eleanor Luisa Haverfield
Born on 18 August 1870 in Callander, Scotland, Eleanor Luisa Haverfield was the daughter of Major J. T. Haverfield. Reference sources on Victorian fiction describe her as a writer who began producing fiction for young adults while still a young woman, and later became known for a substantial body of children's and family-centered stories.
Haverfield is associated with works such as Queensland Cousins and The Ghost of Exlea Priory. Bibliographic sources also note that some of her books drew on Australian characters or settings, even though it is considered unlikely that she ever visited Australia herself.
She spent much of her life in England after her father's death, and died in 1945. One obituary-based account also remembers her as a gifted artist and wood carver, suggesting a creative life that extended beyond her fiction.