She obtained a PhD from UCL in 1996; her PhD at University College London was completed in four years, resulting in her first major book, Coptic and Greek texts Relating to the Hermopolite Monastery of Apa Apollo (2000).
At the same time, she was working as Project Officer for the Manichaean Documentation Centre based first at the Institute of Classical Studies, London, and then at Warwick University; The Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, volume i, Texts from the Roman Empire (1998), bears her name among its authors, as does The Elephantine Papyri in English (1996).
A fund in her name, Sarah (J.) Clackson Coptic Fund, enables scholars to access her papers, which are held in the Archive of the Griffith Institute, Oxford, and to further her work in Coptic and papyrology.
She married fellow Old Loughburian and Cambridge academic James Clackson in 1991.
She was diagnosed with cancer in 1998 and died peacefully at home at 3.00 p.m.
on Sunday 10 August 2003.
Her funeral took place at the West Chapel, Cambridge Crematorium, at 12.45 p.m.
on Tuesday 19 August.
Her memorial is at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge.