Best known for his children’s books Gordon Snell was married to the Irish author Maeve Binchy.
Gordon Snell, the writer, broadcaster and husband of the late author Maeve Binchy, has died, aged 93.
Snell wrote more than 40 books published in Ireland, England, Australia, Canada and the USA and adapted for BBC and RTE radio and television programmes.
Best known for his children’s stories, Snell’s first, The King of Quizzical Island, was published in 1978.

It was while he was working for the BBC in London in the 1970s that he met Maeve Binchy, who was working for The Irish Times.
They married in 1977 and the couple later moved back to Dalkey in Dublin to a house close to where she grew up with her parents.
They were married for 35 years, until her death in 2012.
An only child, Snell was born and raised in Singapore and attended boarding school in Australia.
In a statement, the Echoes Maeve Binchy Literary Festival, which takes place in Dalkey every October, said the couple “spent their very happily married lives together writing heartfelt dedications to each other in their books & entertaining each other with stories.
“Our consolation is that they are reunited together now in love & laughter.”

Publisher Ivan O’Brien described Snell as “creative, imaginative and a true gent”.
O’Brien’s press published a number of his books, including The Supermarket Ghost and Amy’s Wonderful Nest.
Mr O’Brien said: “He genuinely loved telling stories, particularly silly ones, and collaborated richly with his editors and illustrators.
“Gordon knew the value and importance of books for children and the world of children’s books will be poorer without him.”
Binchy’s agent, Christine Green, described him as a “hugely talented writer”, adding: “He was funny and clever and wise and generous: the world is a chiller place with his passing.”
Ms Green said: “He loved his adopted country and it loved him back.”
She described his marriage to Circle of Friends writer Binchy as “close and loving” and said “when she died, he missed her every single day for the rest of his life”.
Snell died peacefully on Wednesday morning.

