Edith Clampton
Mrs. Edith Clampton was a pseudonymous writer to the "Post Bag" (the letters to the editor section) of the Thai English newspaper, the Bangkok Post. Because of her frequent, comedically opinionated and often bizarre letters she came to be identified with the paper's letters page.
She first appeared in the early 1990s and continued contributing on a casual basis until 1996. She was portrayed as an upper-class conservative expatriate of uncertain nationality, with two servants: her maid "Khun Hazel" and her driver "Khun Parker". Her regular appearances kept Post Bag pages topical and controversial. A collection of her letters and replies was published by the newspaper in 1996. Although the editorial staff of the newspaper were made aware of the true identity of Mrs. Clampton, to avoid publishing forgeries, the creator of the nom de plume remains a secret.
See also
Further reading
- Edith Clampton's Letters: And Readers' Responses to Post Bag (1996), Post Books. ISBN 974-202-043-4
- Bangkok Post, 26 December 1993. Page 30. "Those Golden Moments of 1993" – Edith Clampton (Mrs) named "Almost Women of the Year".
External links
- Bangkok Post "educational services" page explaining how to write letters to the editor – citing Edith Clampton as an example.
- The Legendary Edith Clampton
- Bangkok Post "Opinion" Columnist Roger Crutchley on the disappearance of Edith Clampton.