British crime writer Ruth Rendell dies aged 85

Author Ruth Rendell is interviewed by a reporter in New York City September 28, 2005. RENDELL REUTERS/Seth Wenig

LONDON (Reuters) - British crime writer Ruth Rendell, best known as the creator of Detective Chief Inspector Wexford, died in hospital on Saturday at the age of 85, her publisher said. Rendell, the author of more than 60 best-selling novels, had suffered a severe stroke in January. "We are devastated by the loss of one of our best loved authors, Ruth Rendell. Our thoughts are with her family," Penguin Random House UK said in a statement. Rendell's first novel, "From Doon With Death", was published in 1964 and she since wrote several award-winning books, including "A Demon in My View" in 1976 and "Live Flesh" 10 years later. Last year, she published "The Girl Next Door". Rendell's works, some written under the pen name Barbara Vine, have been published in some 30 countries and many have been adapted for television and film. In 1997, she took the title Baroness Rendell of Babergh after being named to the upper house of parliament, the House of Lords, for the opposition Labour Party. “Ruth Rendell was an outstanding and hugely popular figure in British literature and, for the last 18 years, served the Labour Party in the House of Lords with great loyalty and passion," Labour leader Ed Miliband said on Saturday. (Reporting by Stephen Addison; Editing by Angus MacSwan)