John Gardner (British writer)
John Gardner | |
---|---|
Born | Seaton Delaval, Northumberland, England | 20 November 1926
Died | 3 August 2007 Basingstoke, Hampshire, England | (aged 80)
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | St John's College, Cambridge |
Period | 1964–2007 |
Genre | Spy fiction, crime fiction |
Notable works | Boysie Oakes novels; continuation James Bond novels |
Spouse |
Margaret Mercer
(m. 1952; died 1997) |
John Edmund Gardner (20 November 1926 – 3 August 2007) was an English writer of spy and thriller novels. He is best known for his James Bond continuation novels, but also wrote a series of Boysie Oakes books and three novels containing Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional villain, Professor Moriarty.
During the Second World War, Gardner joined the Home Guard at the age of 13, served in the Fleet Air Arm and subsequently joined the Royal Marines: he later described himself as "the worst commando in the world".[1] After demobilisation, he followed his father into the Church of England, studying theology at St John's College, Cambridge, and being ordained as a priest in 1953. After losing his faith, he left the church in 1958 and took a job as a drama critic at the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald.
Gardner's literary career began in 1964 with the autobiographical Spin the Bottle, which detailed his experience of alcoholism. In the same year, he published The Liquidator, a parody of James Bond in which the cowardly Boysie Oakes is mistakenly recruited as a British spy. The book was made into a film, and followed by and seven further Oakes novels and four short stories over the next eleven years. He subsequently wrote further novels centred on the characters of Derek Torry and Herbie Kruger, a Scotland Yard inspector and an intelligence agent respectively. From the mid 1970s onwards, he published three novels using the character of Professor Moriarty from the Sherlock Holmes series.
Between 1981 and 1996, Gardner wrote fourteen James Bond novels and the novelisations of two Bond films, at the invitation of Ian Fleming's former production company, Glidrose Publications. Although commercially popular, his Bond novels were not a critical success: The Guardian considered them "dogged by silliness".[2] He ended his work on Bond following a diagnosis of oesophageal cancer in the 1990s, and took a break from writing altogether in 1997, following the unexpected death of his wife, Margaret Mercer. In 2000, he resumed his literary work, publishing Day of Absolution in 2001 and Bottled Spider in 2002. The latter work introduced Detective Sergeant Suzie Mountford, named after Gardner's ex-fiancée, Patricia Mountford, who resumed her engagement with him after reading the book. He published a further four Suzie Mountford novels before his death in 2007, from suspected heart failure.
Early life
[edit]John Edmund Gardner was born on 20 November 1926 in Seaton Delaval, a village in Northumberland. His parents were Cyril Gardner, a London-born Anglican priest who had been ordained in Wallsend in 1921, and Lena Henderson, a local girl; the couple were married in 1925.[3] In 1933 the family moved to the market town of Wantage in what was then Berkshire, where Cyril took up the position of Chaplain at St Mary's, Wantage, and Gardner was educated at the local King Alfred's School.[3]
During the Second World War he joined the Home Guard, despite being only 13 at the time.[4] Gardner subsequently served in the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm, before transferring to 42 Commando, Royal Marines, for service in the Middle and Far East.[5] Gardner considered himself "the worst commando in the world"[1] and, despite being "a small-arms expert ... [who] also knew a lot about explosives",[1] he admitted that "I bent an aeroplane I was learning to fly".[3]
After the war he went up to St John's College, Cambridge, to study theology and was subsequently ordained as an Anglican priest in 1953.[6] He realised that he had lost his faith and made an error in his career;[5] he later admitted that during one sermon, "I didn't believe a word I was saying".[1] He was released from the church in 1958[1] and took up a position as a drama critic with the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald.[6] It was whilst at the Herald—age 33—that Gardner realised he was an alcoholic, drinking two bottles of gin a day. He overcame his addiction and produced his first book as part of his therapy: the autobiographical Spin the Bottle, published in 1964.[4] Critic and scholar John Sutherland says that of all the books Gardner published, it is "the one that most deserves to survive."[7]
Writing career
[edit]In 1964 Gardner began his novelist career with The Liquidator, in which he created the character Boysie Oakes who inadvertently is mistaken to be a tough, pitiless man of action and is thereupon recruited into a British spy agency.[8] In fact, Oakes was a devout coward who was terrified of violence, suffered from airsickness and was afraid of heights[9] and Gardner admitted of him that, "though I have denied it many times—he was of course a complete piss-take of J. Bond".[10] The book appeared at the height of the fictional spy mania and, as a send-up of the whole business, was an immediate success.[11] Reviewing the novel in The New York Times, Anthony Boucher wrote, "Mr. Gardner succeeds in having it both ways: He has written a clever parody which is also a genuinely satisfactory thriller."[12] The book was made into a film of the same name by MGM and another seven light-hearted novels and four short stories about the cowardly Oakes appeared over the next eleven years.[13]
Following the success of his Oakes books, Gardner created new characters: Derek Torry—a Scotland Yard inspector of Italian descent[14]—and Herbie Kruger,[15] the latter of which appeared in a series of novels published simultaneously with his Bond works.[16] In the mid-1970s Gardner also wrote the first of three novels using the character of Professor Moriarty from the Sherlock Holmes series, the last of which was published posthumously.[17] The third of this series, titled simply Moriarty, was delayed due to a dispute with the publisher, but was finally released shortly after his death.[18] Erik Lee Preminger bought the film rights to the first of the trilogy—The Return of Moriarty—and wrote a script. Edgar Bronfman Jr., for Sagittarius Entertainment and Nat Cohen, for EMI Productions were to produce. Donald Sutherland was to portray Moriarty. Funding however fell through shortly before filming was to begin.[19][20]
In 1979 Glidrose Publications (now Ian Fleming Publications) approached Gardner and asked him to revive Ian Fleming's James Bond series of novels.[5][21] Between 1981 and 1996, Gardner wrote fourteen James Bond novels, and the novelizations of two Bond films.[22] Gardner stated that he wanted "to bring Mr Bond into the 1980s",[23] although he retained the ages of the characters as they were when Fleming had left them.[24] Even though Gardner kept the ages the same, he made Bond grey at the temples as a nod to the passing of the years.[25] With the influence of the American publishers, Putnam's, the Gardner novels showed an increase in the number of Americanisms used in the book, such as a waiter wearing "pants", rather than trousers, in The Man from Barbarossa.[2] James Harker, writing in The Guardian, considered that the Gardner books were "dogged by silliness",[2] giving examples of Scorpius, where much of the action is set in Chippenham, and Win, Lose or Die, where "Bond gets chummy with an unconvincing Maggie Thatcher".[2] Whilst Gardner's Bond novels received a mixed reaction from the critics, they were popular and a number appeared in The New York Times Best Seller list,[26] bringing the author commercial success.[27]
Gardner had an ambivalent view on being the Bond author, once saying "I'm very grateful to have been selected to keep Bond alive. But I'd much rather be remembered for my own work than I would for Bond",[16] while saying on another occasion that "I remain proud that my contribution to the Bond saga played a great part in its development".[13] In the mid-1990s, after discovering he had oesophageal cancer, Gardner officially retired from writing Bond novels[5] and Glidrose Publications quickly chose Raymond Benson to continue the literary stories of James Bond.[28]
His break from writing lasted for five years, following the death of his wife,[13] but after battling his illness he returned to print in 2000 with a new novel, Day of Absolution.[29] Gardner also began a series of books with a new character, Suzie Mountford, a 1930s police detective.[4]
The Globe and Mail crime critic Derrick Murdoch said, "John Gardner is technically a highly competent thriller novelist who never seems to be quite at ease unless he is writing in the same vein as another writer. (He has worked John le Carré and Graham Greene this way, and it's what makes him so well qualified to continue the James Bond saga.)"[30]
The Crime Writers' Association short-listed The Liquidator, The Dancing Dodo, The Nostradamus Traitor, and The Garden of Weapons for their annual Gold Dagger award.[31]
Personal life
[edit]In 1952 Gardner married Margaret Mercer[6] and the couple had two children, Simon and Alexis.[5] Gardner also had another daughter, Miranda, the result of a long affair with Susan Wright, a former personal assistant to Peter Sellers.[3] In 1989, Gardner and his family moved to the US and it was in America that he was diagnosed with cancer; firstly of the prostate and then, six years later, of the oesophagus.[32] The subsequent medical treatment in the US left him near bankrupt[3] and he returned to the UK in November 1996.[32] Shortly after his return, in February 1997, Margaret died unexpectedly.[5][32]
When Gardner returned to writing, his second book, Bottled Spider, introduced a new character, Detective Sergeant Suzie Mountford. Gardner took the surname from Patricia Mountford, an ex-girlfriend to whom he had been engaged in 1949. When she read the book Mountford contacted Gardner through his publishers,[33] and the two were subsequently engaged.[6]
Gardner died on Friday 3 August 2007 from suspected heart failure.[4]
Works
[edit]Autobiography
[edit]- Spin the Bottle (1964)[34]
Boysie Oakes novels
[edit]- The Liquidator (1964)[35]
- Understrike (1965)[36]
- Amber Nine (1966)[37]
- Madrigal (1967)[38]
- Founder Member (1969)[39]
- Traitor's Exit (1970)[40]
- The Airline Pirates (1970)[41]
- A Killer for a Song (1975)[42]
Derek Torry novels
[edit]Professor Moriarty novels
[edit]Herbie Kruger novels
[edit]- The Nostradamus Traitor (1979)[37]
- The Garden of Weapons (1980)[45]
- The Quiet Dogs (1982)[46]
- Maestro (1993)[47]
- Confessor (1995)[48]
The Railton family novels
[edit]James Bond novels
[edit]- Licence Renewed (1981)[52]
- For Special Services (1982)[53]
- Icebreaker (1983)[53]
- Role of Honour (1984)[53]
- Nobody Lives for Ever (1986)[53]
- No Deals, Mr. Bond (1987)[53]
- Scorpius (1988)[54]
- Win, Lose or Die (1989)[54]
- Licence to Kill (1989) – novelization of a film script[54]
- Brokenclaw (1990)[54]
- The Man from Barbarossa (1991)[54]
- Death is Forever (1992)[54]
- Never Send Flowers (1993)[54]
- SeaFire (1994)[54]
- GoldenEye (1995) – novelization of a film script[54]
- Cold (1996)[54]
Detective Sergeant Suzie Mountford novels
[edit]- Bottled Spider (2002)[37]
- The Streets of Town (2003)
- Angels Dining at the Ritz (2004)
- Troubled Midnight (2005)
- No Human Enemy (2007)[37]
Other novels
[edit]- The Censor (1970)[55]
- Every Night's a Bullfight (1971)[56]
- To Run a Little Faster (1976)[57]
- The Werewolf Trace (1977)[58]
- The Dancing Dodo (1978)[59]
- Golgotha (1980)[60]
- The Director (1982) (A re-working of his 1971 novel Every Night's a Bullfight.)
- Flamingo (1983)[61]
- Blood of the Fathers (1992) (as by "Edmund McCoy". Later published under his own name in 2004.)[62]
- Day of Absolution (2001)[63]
Short story collections
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Weil, Martin (9 August 2007). "Novelist John Gardner; Reimagined Fleming's James Bond". The Washington Post. Washington. p. B07.
- ^ a b c d Harker, James (2 June 2011). "James Bond's changing incarnations". guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Wilson, Arnie (7 August 2007). "John Gardner; Thriller writer who revived Bond". The Independent. London. p. 35.
- ^ a b c d "Obituary: John Gardner". The Times. London. 9 August 2007. p. 65.
- ^ a b c d e f Ripley, Mike (2 November 2007). "John Gardner; Prolific thriller writer behind the revival of James Bond and Professor Moriarty". The Guardian. London. p. 41.
- ^ a b c d Fox, Margalit (29 August 2007). "John Gardner, Who Continued the James Bond Series, Dies at 80". The New York Times. New York. p. 21.
- ^ Sutherland 2011, p. 226.
- ^ Britton 2005, p. 107.
- ^ McCormick 1977, p. 84.
- ^ Sutherland 2011, p. 89.
- ^ "Obituary: John Gardner". Liverpool Daily Post. Liverpool. 8 August 2007. p. 13.
- ^ Boucher, Anthony (18 October 1964). "Criminals at Large". The New York Times. New York. p. BR46.
- ^ a b c "The Past". John Gardner. Estate of John Gardner. Archived from the original on 31 October 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
- ^ Hubin, Allen J. (5 October 1969). "Criminals at Large". The New York Times. New York. p. BR36.
- ^ Binyon, T. J. (26 December 1980). "Criminal proceedings". The Times Literary Supplement. London. p. 1458.
- ^ a b "Gardner, whose thrillers include 14 Bond books, dies at 80". CBC News. 30 August 2007. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
- ^ Cohen, George (4 January 1976). "Guess who didn't really kill whom at Reichenbach Falls". Chicago Tribune. Chicago. p. G3.
- ^ Anderson, Patrick (24 November 2008). "Lord of the Lurkers and Dollymops". The Washington Post. Washington. p. C08.
- ^ Hirsch 2011, p. unknown.
- ^ Kilday, Gregg (8 September 1976). "A Dream Movie From Altman". Los Angeles Times. p. E10.
- ^ Adrian 1991, p. 418.
- ^ "John Gardner (1926–2007)". The Books. London: Ian Fleming Publications. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
- ^ Black 2005, p. 185.
- ^ Benson 1988, p. 61.
- ^ Benson 1988, p. 149.
- ^ Clymer, Adam (20 August 2007). "John Gardner, Bond novelist". International Herald Tribune. Paris. p. 4.
- ^ Panja, Tariq (30 August 2007). "John Gardner, prolific British writer who authored 14 James Bond novels, dies at 80". Associated Press Worldstream. London.
- ^ "Raymond Benson". The Books. London: Ian Fleming Publications. Archived from the original on 27 December 2010. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
- ^ "Gardner, John: Day of Absolution". Kirkus Reviews. 15 August 2000.
- ^ Murdoch, Derrick (24 December 1983). "It's a Crime: At home with Bogart, Bergman and Cuddles". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. p. E.13.
- ^ Sobin 2011, p. 1869.
- ^ a b c Pukas, Anna (6 July 2002). "Writer Who Took on the Bond Mission". Daily Express. London. p. 51.
- ^ "Writer dates his character". The Sunday Times. Johannesburg. 24 October 2004. p. 3.
- ^ "John Gardner". 28 March 2019.
- ^ Benson, Raymond (2012). "The James Bond Bedside Companion".
- ^ "Understrike". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Obituary: John Gardner". TheGuardian.com. 2 November 2007.
- ^ "Madrigal". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "Founder member". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "Traitor's Exit". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Airline Pirates: A New Boysie Oakes Adventure". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "A Killer for a Song: A Boysie Oakes Entertainment". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Corner Men". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "Moriarty". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Garden of Weapons". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Quiet Dogs". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "John Gardner". 28 March 2019.
- ^ "Confessor". WorldCat.
- ^ "The Secret Generations | Kirkus Reviews".
- ^ "The Secret Houses". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Secret Families". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ Benson, Raymond (2012). "The James Bond Bedside Companion".
- ^ a b c d e "Continuation Bond Archives - Page 3 of 4". Ian Fleming Publications. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Continuation Bond Archives - Page 2 of 4". Ian Fleming Publications. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ The censor. New English Library. 1970. ISBN 9780450006098. OCLC 59253369.
- ^ "Every Night's a Bullfight". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "To Run a Little Faster". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Werewolf Trace". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "The Dancing Dodo". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "Golgotha". WorldCat. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "Flamingo". WorldCat.
- ^ a b c "Gardner, John". Oxford Reference. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
- ^ "In his own words – John Gardner".
Bibliography
[edit]- Adrian, Jack (1991). John Gardner: Overview in Twentieth-Century Crime and Mystery Writers ed. Lesley Henderson. Chicago and London: St. James Press. ISBN 978-1-55862-031-5.
- Benson, Raymond (1988). The James Bond Bedside Companion. London: Boxtree Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85283-233-9.
- Black, Jeremy (2005). The Politics of James Bond: from Fleming's Novel to the Big Screen. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-6240-9.
- Britton, Wesley Alan (2005). Beyond Bond: spies in fiction and film. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-98556-1.
- Hirsch, Foster (2011). Otto Preminger: The Man Who Would Be King. Random House. ISBN 9780307489210.
- McCormick, Donald (1977). Who's who in spy fiction. London: Elm Tree Books. ISBN 0-241-89447-6.
- Sobin, Roger (2011). The Essential Mystery Lists: For Readers, Collectors, and Librarians. ReadHowYouWant.com. ISBN 978-1-4596-1375-1.
- Sutherland, John (2011). Lives of the Novelists: A History of Fiction in 294 Lives. Profile Books. ISBN 978-1-84668-157-8.
External links
[edit]- 1926 births
- 2007 deaths
- Military personnel from Northumberland
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- British spy fiction writers
- Royal Marines personnel of World War II
- Royal Marines Commando officers
- English thriller writers
- People from Seaton Delaval
- Writers from Northumberland
- Writers of Sherlock Holmes pastiches
- British postmodern writers
- 20th-century English novelists
- 21st-century English novelists
- English male novelists
- British Home Guard soldiers
- 20th-century English male writers
- 21st-century English male writers
- Fleet Air Arm personnel of World War II
- Child soldiers in World War II