Charles Kingston (author)
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Charles Kingston O'Mahony (c. 18849 November 1944), who wrote as Charles Kingston, was an Irish journalist and author in England during the
Golden Age of Detective Fiction The Golden Age of Detective Fiction was an era of classic murder mystery novels of similar patterns and styles, predominantly in the 1920s and 1930s. The Golden Age proper is, in practice, usually taken to refer to a type of fiction which was pre ...
of the 1920s and 30s. Many of his novels were set in London, including a seven book series featuring the fictional detective Chief Inspector Wake of Scotland Yard. His work has been described as more competent than cutting-edge, but showing a clear familiarity with the criminal underworld in London. He also produced a number of popular non-fiction books that collected stories of fraudsters, murderers, and assorted rogues, as well as famous legal cases and stories of judges. Among his more high-brow works are a history of the viceroys of Ireland (1912), which was also his first book; a study of Morganatic marriages; stories of Monte Carlo; and a study of the literary associations of Esher and Thames Ditton, where he lived during his last years.


Early life and family

Charles Kingston O'Mahony was born around 1884Charles K O'Mahony England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837-2007.
Family Search. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
in Mitchelstown, County Cork, in Ireland.Charles O Mahony England and Wales Census, 1911.
Family Search. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
In 1908, he was living at 14 Rugby Chambers in London's
Rugby Street Rugby Street, formerly known as Chapel Street, is a street in the Bloomsbury district of the London Borough of Camden. It was built between around 1700 and 1721 on land that was given to Rugby School in Warwickshire and now forms part of London's ...
. He married Julia Christine Ellis in Staines, Middlesex, in 1910.


Career

O'Mahony worked as a journalist and author. His first book was an historical study of ''The Viceroys of Ireland'', published by John Long in London in 1912, which he wrote as Charles O'Mahony. Later he used the pen-name of Charles Kingston and wrote a number of popular non-fiction works such as ''Remarkable Rogues: The careers of some notable criminals of Europe and America'' (1921), ''Society Sensations'' (1922), and ''A Gallery of Rogues'' (1924). Between 1923 and 1930 he published eight books dealing with the law and the courts, such as, ''Famous Judges and Famous Trials'', ''Dramatic Days at the Old Bailey'', and ''The Judges and the Judged''. He published his first novel, ''Stolen Virtue'', in 1921, afterwards publishing mainly detective fiction, often set in London, such as ''The Portland Place Mystery'' (1926), ''The Highgate Mystery'' (1928), and ''Poison in Kensington'' (1934). He published seven novels featuring Chief Inspector Wake of
Scotland Yard Scotland Yard (officially New Scotland Yard) is the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police, the territorial police force responsible for policing Greater London's 32 boroughs, but not the City of London, the square mile that forms London's ...
, starting with ''Murder in Piccadilly'' in 1936. His publishers were principally the large popular publishers of his time such as John Lane,
Stanley Paul Stanley Paul are a firm of publishers founded in London in 1906. The original firm published mainly "cheap editions of thrillers and romances, and some light non-fiction" and traded until 1927 when it went in liquidation. In 1928 the imprint was r ...
, and Ward Lock.


Reviews

O'Mahony's ''Remarkable Rogues'' (1921) was reviewed in '' The Saturday Review'' who described it as an "artless and somewhat dateless book written in the style of the novelette". A series of lively sketches, the ''Review'' found them more entertaining than edifying. His ''Society Sensations'' was reviewed in '' The Bookman'' in 1922 who opined that his works were easy to assemble from newspaper reports, memoirs, and similar sources, but acknowledged their entertainment value and that there was a significant market for such works. Of the book under review, they noted that most of the scandals involved men's misadventures with women and that a cynic might view the book "as a warning against marriage and women in general". ''Enemies of Society'' (1927) was a selection of murders that ''The Saturday Review'' noted included five doctors of medicine such as the "Lambeth poisoner" and serial killer Dr
Thomas Neill Cream Thomas Neill Cream (27 May 1850 – 15 November 1892), also known as the Lambeth Poisoner, was a Scottish-Canadian medical doctor and serial killer who poisoned his victims with strychnine. Over the course of his career, he murdered up to ...
, and the lexicographer Dr William Chester Minor. In 1928, the same publication wrote of O'Mahony's choice of ''Rogues and Adventuresses'' that some figures from the past are "best forgotten" while ''The Bookman'' said that at least O'Mahony was honest in attempting to do no more than entertain, which he did with a terse and vigorous prose style, even if his taste was somewhat morbid. In fiction, ''The Portland Place Mystery'' (1926) was described as working its way "smoothly along the accepted lines of high life romance." ''Poison in Kensington'' (1934) features a blackmailing doctor of medicine whose motives are revealed to be pure in the end in a plot the reviewer found unlikely. ''Murder in Piccadilly'' (1936) was republished by Poisoned Pen Press in 2015 in the British Library Crime Classics series with an introduction by crime writer
Martin Edwards Charles Martin Edwards (born 24 July 1945) is the former chairman of Manchester United, a position he held from 1980 until 2002. He now holds the position of honorary life president at the club and Director of Inview Technology Ltd. Biography ...
in which he characterised O'Mahony's work as traditional, competently plotted, and "infused with a quiet sense of humour", but observed that the plot of inter-generational conflict leading to murder was not new, even to O'Mahony's work, and he was not in the avant-garde of 1930s crime writing. Nonetheless, Edwards identified in O'Mahony an affinity for the London underworld found in districts such as
Soho Soho is an area of the City of Westminster, part of the West End of London. Originally a fashionable district for the aristocracy, it has been one of the main entertainment districts in the capital since the 19th century. The area was develop ...
, and a willingness for his characters to mention contemporary criminal cases such as the rape and murder of 10 year old Vera Page in 1931 which is referenced in the book by O'Mahony's detective Wake. The book is also notable for leaving the murder, and the introduction of Wake who will solve it, until half way through the story."Introduction" by Martin Edwards in Charles Kingston (2015) ''Murder in Piccadilly''. London: Poisoned Pen Press. pp. v-viii.


Death and legacy

O'Mahony died in the county of Surrey, England, on 9 November 1944. His address at the time of his death was The Old Red Cottage, Weston Green, Esher. He left an estate of £282. His last book, ''Fear Followed On'', in the Chief Inspector Wake series, was published posthumously by Stanley Paul in 1945.''Fear Followed On''
British Library. Retrieved 28 June 2020.


Selected publications


Fiction


1920s

* ''Stolen Virtue''. Stanley Paul, London, 1921. * ''A Miscarriage of Justice''. Stanley Paul, London, 1925. * ''The Portland Place Mystery''. Federation Press, London, 1926. * ''The Highgate Mystery''. John Lane, London, 1928. * ''The Guilty House''. John Lane, London, 1928. * ''The Infallible System''. John Lane, London, 1929.


1930s

* ''The Great London Mystery''. John Lane, London, 1931. * ''Poison in Kensington''. Ward Lock, London, 1934. * ''The Brighton Beach Mystery''. Ward Lock, London, 1936. *
Murder in Piccadilly
'. Ward Lock, London, 1936. * ''The Circle of Guilt''. Ward Lock, London, 1937. * ''The Rigdale Puzzle''. Ward Lock, London, 1937. * ''Murder in Disguise''. Ward Lock, London, 1938. * ''Burning Conscience''. Ward Lock, London, 1938. * ''I Accuse''. Mellifont, London, 1939. * ''Slander Villa''. Ward Lock, London, 1939. * ''The Secret Barrier''. Ward Lock, London, 1939.


1940s

* ''Six Under Suspicion''. Ward Lock, London, 1940. * ''The Delacott Mystery''. Ward Lock, London, 1941. * ''Vain Pride''. Ward Lock, London, 1941 * ''Mystery in the Mist''. Ward Lock, London, 1942. * ''Murder Tunes In''. Ward Lock, London, 1942. * ''Death Came Back''. Stanley Paul, London, 1944. * ''Fear Followed On''. Stanley Paul, London, 1945.


Non-fiction

*
The Viceroys of Ireland
'. John Long, London, 1912. * ''Famous Morganatic Marriages''. Stanley Paul, London, 1919. *
Remarkable Rogues: The careers of some notable criminals of Europe and America
'. John Lane, London, 1921. *
Royal Romances and Tragedies
'. Stanley Paul, London, 1921. * ''Society Sensations''. Stanley Paul, London, 1922. *
Famous Judges and Famous Trials
'. Stanley Paul, London, 1923. *
Dramatic Days at the Old Bailey
'. Stanley Paul, London, 1923. * ''A Gallery of Rogues''. Stanley Paul, London, 1924. * ''The Bench and the Dock''. Stanley Paul, London, 1925. * ''The Judges and the Judged''. John Lane, London, 1926. * ''Enemies of Society''. Stanley Paul, London, 1927. * ''Rogues and Adventuresses''. John Lane, London, 1928. * ''Law-Breakers''. John Lane, London, 1930. * ''The Shadow of Monte Carlo and other Stories of the Principality.'' Grant Richards, London, 1931. * ''Literary Associations of Esher and Thames Ditton'', Wolsey Press, Esher, 1943.


References


External links


Charles Kingston O'Mahony grave monument in St Nicholas Garden of Remembrance Cremation Memorials, Thames Ditton, Surrey, England.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kingston, Charles Irish male journalists 20th-century Irish novelists Irish emigrants to the United Kingdom Irish crime fiction writers 20th-century Irish non-fiction writers 1880s births 1944 deaths Year of birth uncertain 20th-century Irish journalists People from Mitchelstown Writers from County Cork