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Elleston Trevor
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==Life and work== === Early life === Trevor was born (as Trevor Dudley-Smith) to an [[alcoholism|alcoholic]] stockbroker and his (also alcoholic) wife. He hated his prep school, [[Yardley Court]], where he was beaten weekly for doing badly at [[Latin]], and subsequently also disliked [[Sevenoaks School]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://authorscalendar.info/etrevor.htm|title=Elleston Trevor|website=authorscalendar.info|access-date=2019-09-12}}</ref> He did not attend university, having been apprenticed as a racing driver and then recruited by the [[Royal Air Force]] as a [[Flight engineer|Flight Engineer]] for the duration of the [[World War II|Second World War]]. He also wrote prolifically, having several story-books for children published while still serving in the air force.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-elleston-trevor-1593532.html|title=Obituary: Elleston Trevor|date=1995-07-28|website=The Independent|language=en|access-date=2019-09-12}}</ref> In the 1950s, he was a bestselling author of military adventure stories, published mainly, at that stage, by [[Heinemann (publisher)|Heinemann]]. His spy writing started in the early 1960s and he was often described in the blurb to his paperbacks as "Adam Hall, the mystery author of international bestsellerdom". ===Private life=== Born in [[Bromley]], [[Kent]], he lived after the Second World War in [[Roedean, East Sussex|Roedean]], by [[Brighton]], [[Sussex]], before relocating out of the UK. He lived in Spain and France for fifteen years before moving in 1973 to the United States, where he lived in [[Phoenix, Arizona|Phoenix]], Arizona and where he died of cancer, in [[Cave Creek, Arizona|Cave Creek]], in 1995. He was married twice β in 1947 to Jonquil Burgess (died 1986) by whom he had one son, [[Jean Pierre Trevor]], and in 1987 to Chaille Anne Groom.<ref>Obituary: Elleston Trevor | ''The Independent'', Jack Adrian, 28 July 1995</ref>[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-elleston-trevor-1593532.html] He was proficient in [[karate]]. He also enjoyed flying kites and racing miniature cars. ===Writing=== The [[Quiller]] series focuses on a solitary, highly capable "shadow executive" (named after [[Arthur Quiller-Couch|Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch]]) who works (generally alone) for a British agency in Whitehall called "the Bureau". Officially the organization doesn't exist, which allows a greater latitude to the sometimes-questionable and always hazardous operations it conducts. He narrates his own adventures. Quiller (not his real name) occupies a literary middle ground between [[James Bond]] and [[John le CarrΓ©]]. He is a skilled driver, pilot, diver, martial artist, and linguist, but he does not carry a gun. Regarded by his superiors as "reliable under torture", Quiller is sometimes captured, then interrogated or tortured without giving away vital information.<ref name=spy/> The series is very stylized, featuring intense depictions of spy tradecraft (especially "shadowing," the techniques of tailing and evading surveillance) and professional relationships, surprising jump cuts between chapters, and deep, self-critical, incisive, practically stream-of-consciousness, interior monologues highlighting Quiller's mental self-discipline. Most of the novels feature a high-speed car chase, with Quiller as pursuer or pursued, and an extended, detailed scene of hand-to-hand combat. The first of the Quiller novels, ''The Berlin Memorandum'' (1965) (retitled ''[[The Quiller Memorandum]]'' in the US) won an [[Edgar Award]], from the [[Mystery Writers of America]], for Best Novel. It was filmed in 1966 under its US title with a screenplay by [[Harold Pinter]] and starred [[George Segal]], [[Max von Sydow]], and [[Alec Guinness]]. It was also adapted into a 1975 British [[television programme|television series]], featuring [[Michael Jayston]].<ref name=spy/> As "Simon Rattray," he wrote mystery novels featuring Hugo Bishop, a brilliant man who, like [[Agatha Christie]]'s [[Hercule Poirot]], solved crimes as a kind of mental challenge. The first Bishop novel, ''Knight Sinister'', appeared in 1951; five more followed, the last appearing in 1957. (These have later been republished under the Adam Hall byline.) That Trevor could also be very effective in the straight, non-mystery genre is shown by ''The Billboard Madonna'' (1961): the protagonist accidentally kills a beautiful woman in a car crash, and is obsessively compelled to memorialize her. Under the name "Adam Hall," he also wrote ''The Volcanoes of San Domingo'' about a mysterious plane crash off the coast of San Domingo and the efforts to uncover what really happened. When alerted by a report indicating that one of the crew members had been seen alive, "Rayner," an employee of the airline, is sent to investigate. He also wrote children's books about the character "Wumpus", a [[koala]], and his friends, including Flip Flap, the penguin. Titles included ''Wumpus'' (published 1945, by Gerald G. Swan), and ''More about Wumpus'' (published 1947). Other children's books include ''Scamper-Foot the Pine Marten'', ''Ripple-Swim the Otter'', and the Woodlander series (''Deep Wood'', ''Green Glade'', ''Sweethallow Valley'', ''Badger's Moon'', ''Badger's Beech'', ''Badger's Wood'', ''Mole's Castle'' and ''Panic in the Woodland''). His book ''The Big Pick-Up'' was one of the stories on which the 1958 film ''[[Dunkirk (1958 film)|Dunkirk]]'' was based.{{citation needed|date=May 2019}} Trevor also wrote radio plays for the [[BBC Radio|BBC]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Pendexter|first=Faunce|title=Between The BookEnds|newspaper=[[Lewiston Evening Journal]]|date=17 September 1955|page=8A|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Pz1HAAAAIBAJ&pg=2331,1802671&dq=elleston-trevor+radio&hl=en}}</ref>
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