Edwy Searles Brooks
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Edwy Searles Brooks (11 November 1889 – 2 December 1965) was a British
novelist A novelist is an author or writer of novels, though often novelists also write in other genres of both fiction and non-fiction. Some novelists are professional novelists, thus make a living writing novels and other fiction, while others aspire ...
who also wrote under the pen-names Berkeley Gray, Victor Gunn, Rex Madison, and Carlton Ross. Brooks was born in Hackney,
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
. He is believed to have written around 40 million words.


Life and work

Brooks was one of four sons (there was also a daughter) of George Brooks, a Congregational minister and well-known political writer including for ''
The Times ''The Times'' is a British daily national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its current name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its sister paper '' The Sunday Times'' ( ...
''. When the family relocated to Norfolk, Brooks attended Banham Grammar School in that county. His first name was a Welsh form of "Edwin"; his second a grandmother's surname. Brooks published his first short story, "Mr Dorien's Missing £2000", in July 1907, when he was seventeen. His first major breakthrough came in 1910, when the paper ''The Gem'' gave him an assignment to publish a serial named "The Iron Island", the main character being Frank Kingston. In 1912 he wrote his first Sexton Blake stories and in 1915 started writing
Nelson Lee Nelson Lee (born October 16, 1975) is a Taiwanese-Canadian actor. He is best known for portraying Shen in '' Blade: The Series'' and Dragon King in '' Stargirl''. Life and career Lee was born in Taipei, Taiwan on October 16, 1975. He starred in ...
detective stories for ''
The Nelson Lee Library ''The Nelson Lee Library'' was a story paper of the first third of the 20th century, published by Amalgamated Press. It featured the adventures of private detective Nelson Lee and his boy assistant Nipper. Overview Nelson Lee was created by Joh ...
'', becoming the lead writer of the detective series after which the publication was named. In 1917 he started the St. Frank's series in that paper, the stories for which he is best remembered. Additional serial assignments followed, including those featuring Clive Derring and Sexton Blake. In 1918 he launched the character of Rupert Waldo, an early superhero. In 1918 he married Frances (daughter of master tailor Abraham Goldstein), who became his assistant and collaborator through the years. The two took great pride in delivering clean manuscripts for publication throughout their careers. They became a cornerstone of the
Amalgamated Press The Amalgamated Press (AP) was a British newspaper and magazine publishing company founded by journalist and entrepreneur Alfred Harmsworth (1865–1922) in 1901, gathering his many publishing ventures together under one banner. At one point the ...
imprints. Their son, Lionel (1928–), wrote ''Conquest Calls The Tune'' (1968) with his mother, and 1969's ''Conquest in Ireland'' alone. The magazines that had published his stories started running into financial trouble in the 1930s, and Brooks started publishing hardcover novels for the adult market in 1938 with the first novel in the Norman Conquest series under the pseudonym of Berkeley Gray. He also published stories and novels as Victor Gunn featuring Ironsides Cromwell. He may have also continued publishing stories through D C Thomson & Co. Ltd, a
Dundee Dundee (; sco, Dundee; gd, Dùn Dè or ) is Scotland's fourth-largest city and the 51st-most-populous built-up area in the United Kingdom. The mid-year population estimate for 2016 was , giving Dundee a population density of 2,478/km2 or ...
-based rival of Amalgamated that was less affected by paper shortage. His serialised novels included the ''Norman Conquest'' and ''Ironsides Cromwell'' stories. ''Dare-Devil Conquest'' formed the basis for the 1954 movie '' Park Plaza 605'' starring Tom Conway.


The Norman Conquest Novels (writing as Berkeley Gray)

# Mr Mortimer Gets the Jitters (1938) # Vultures, Ltd. (1938) # Conquest Marches On (1939) # Leave It to Conquest (1939) # Miss Dynamite (1939) # Conquest Takes All (1940) # Convict 1066 (1940) # Meet the Don (1940) # Six to Kill (1940) # Six Feet of Dynamite (1941) # Thank You, Mr. Conquest (1941) # The Gay Desperado (1944) # Alias Norman Conquest (1945) # Blonde For Danger (1945) # The Conquest Touch (1948) # The Spot Marked X (1948) # Killer Conquest (1949) # Dare-devil Conquest (1950) # Duel Murder (1950) # Seven Dawns to Death (1950) # Conquest in Scotland (1951) # Operation Conquest (1951) # The Lady Is Poison (1952) # The Half-Open Door (1953) # Target for Conquest (1953) # Conquest Goes West (1954) # Follow the Lady (1954) # Turn Left for Danger (1955) # Conquest in Command (1956) # The House of the Lost (1956) # Conquest After Midnight (1957) # Conquest Goes Home (1957) # Conquest in California (1958) # Death On the Hit Parade (1958) # Mr. Ball of Fire (1958) # The Big Brain (1959) # Murder and Co (1959) # Conquest On the Run (1960) # Nightmare House (1960) # Call Conquest for Danger (1961) # Get Ready to Die (1961) # Conquest in the Underworld (1962) # Cavalier Conquest (1963) # Count Down for Conquest (1963) # Castle Conquest (1964) # Conquest Overboard (1964) # Calamity Conquest (1965) # Conquest Likes It Hot (1965) # Curtains for Conquest? (1966) # Conquest Calls the Tune (1968) # Conquest in Ireland (1969)


The "Ironsides" Cromwell Novels (writing as Victor Gunn)

# Footsteps of Death (1939) # Ironsides of the Yard (1940) # Ironsides Smashes Through (1940) # Death's Doorway (1941) # Ironsides' Lone Hand (1941) # Mad Hatter's Rock (1942) # Ironsides Sees Red (1943) # The Dead Man Laughs (1944) # Nice Day for a Murder (1945) # Ironsides Smells Blood (1946) # Death On Shivering Sand (1947) # Three Dates with Death (1947) # Ironsides On the Spot (1948) # Dead Man's Warning (1949) # Road to Murder (1949) # Alias the Hangman (1950) # The Borgia Head Mystery (1951) # Murder On Ice (1951) # The Body Vanishes (1952) # Death Comes Laughing (1952) # The Whistling Key (1953) # The Crippled Canary (1954) # The Crooked Staircase (1954) # The Laughing Grave (1955) # The Painted Dog (1955) # Dead Men's Bells (1956) # Castle Dangerous (1957) # The Golden Monkey (1957) # The 64 Thousand Murder (1958) # The Treble Chance Murder (1958) # Dead in a Ditch (1959) # The Next One to Die (1959) # Death at Traitors' Gate (1960) # Death On Bodmin Moor (1960) # Devil in the Maze (1961) # Sweet Smelling Death (1961) # All Change for Murder (1962) # The Body in the Boot (1963) # Murder with a Kiss (1963) # Murder At the Motel (1964) # The Black Cap Murder (1965) # Murder on Whispering Sands (1965) # The Petticoat Lane Murders (1966)


Selected Bibliography

* The Rotter of Whitelands (under pseud. Reginald Browne). Published by: London, Gerald G. Swan, 1947 * Fortescue of the Fourth (under pseud. Reginald Browne). * The School in Space (under pseud. Reginald Browne).


References

*


External links


Edwy Searles Brooks: Creator of Norman Conquest, 'Ironsides' of the Yard of St. Frank's

edwysearlesbrooks.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brooks, Edwy Searles English crime fiction writers 1889 births 1965 deaths British boys' story papers People from Hackney Central British male novelists 20th-century English novelists British science fiction writers 20th-century English male writers Authors of Sexton Blake