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Victor Canning

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British writer (1911–1986)

Victor Canning (16 June 1911 – 21 February 1986) was a prolificBritish writer of novels andthrillers who flourished in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. He was personally reticent, writing no memoirs and giving relatively few newspaper interviews.

Life

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Canning was born in Plymouth, Devon, the eldest child of a coach builder, Fred Canning, and his wife May, née Goold. DuringWorld War I his father served as an ambulance driver in France andFlanders, while he with his two sisters went to live in the village ofCalstock ten miles north of Plymouth, where his uncle Cecil Goold worked for the railways and later became station master. After the war the family returned to Plymouth. In the mid-1920s they moved toOxford where his father had found work, and Victor attended the Oxford Central School. Here he was encouraged to stay on at school and go to university by a classical scholar, Dr. Henderson, but the family could not afford it and instead Victor went to work as a clerk in the education office at age 16.[1]

Within three years he had started sellingshort stories to boys' magazines and in 1934, his first novel,Mr. Finchley Discovers His England, was accepted byHodder and Stoughton and became a runaway best seller. He gave up his job and started writing full-time, producing thirteen more novels in the next six years under three different names.Lord Rothermere engaged him to write for theDaily Mail, and a number of his travel articles for theDaily Mail were collected as a book with illustrations by Leslie Stead under the titleEveryman's England in 1936. He also continued to write short stories.[1]

In 1935 he married Phyllis McEwen, a woman from a theatrical family whom he met while she was working with a touringvaudeville production atWeston-super-Mare. They had three daughters, Lindel born in 1939, Hilary born in 1940, and Virginia who was born in 1942, but died in infancy.

In 1940, he enlisted in the Army, and was sent for training with theRoyal Artillery inLlandrindod Wells in mid-Wales, where he trained alongside his friendEric Ambler. Both were commissioned as second lieutenants in 1941. Canning worked inanti-aircraft batteries in the south of England until early 1943, when he was sent to North Africa and took part in theAllied invasion of Sicily and the Italian campaigns. At the end of the war he was assigned to an Anglo-American unit doing experimental work withradar range-finding. It wastop secret work but nothing to do with espionage, though Canning never discouraged the assumption of publishers and reviewers that his espionage stories were partly based on experience.[2] He was discharged in 1946 with the rank of major.[3]

He resumed writing withThe Chasm (1947), a novel about identifying a Nazi collaborator who has hidden himself in a remote Italian village: the novel is inspired by the events of the partisan republic of Corniolo, on theForlì Apennines.[4] A film of this was planned but never finished. Canning's next book,Panther's Moon, was filmed asSpy Hunt, and from now on Canning was established as someone who could write a book a year in the suspense genre, have them reliably appear in book club and paperback editions on both sides of the Atlantic, be translated into the main European languages, and in many cases get filmed. He himself spent a year in Hollywood working on scripts for movies of his own books and on TV shows. The money earned from the film ofThe Golden Salamander (filmed withTrevor Howard) meant that Canning could buy a substantial country house with some land in Kent, Marle Place. He had moved fromStansted in February 1952,[5] and he then lived in Marle Place until 1969 and where his daughter continues to live now. From the mid-1950s onwards, his books became more conventional, full of exotic settings, stirring action sequences and stock characters. In 1965 he began a series of four books featuring a private detective calledRex Carver, and these were among his most successful in sales terms.[6]

Some time at the end of the 1960s, he began an affair with Diana Bird, the estranged wife of a solicitor living in the area, which led to his separation from Phyllis and leaving the family home in 1969 to settle in Devon. He had to wait five years for his divorce, and finally married Diana Bird in 1974. She died in February 1976. The six and a half years that they lived together were an extraordinarily productive period for him, containing almost all of his best work, including the first five of his 'Birdcage' novels, a trilogy of books for children starting withThe Runaways, and the beginning of a trilogy retelling the legends of King Arthur,The Crimson Chalice.[7]

Canning married Adria Irving-Bell in November 1976, and they moved to Gloucestershire and then Herefordshire, then back to Gloucestershire. He continued writing a book a year, and started to write radio plays, of which three were broadcast. He died inCirencester, Gloucestershire in 1986, aged 74. His last book,Table Number Seven, was completed by his wife Adria and his sister Jean. Adria Canning continued to live in Cirencester. She died there in 1986.[1]

Canning seems to have been a generous and friendly man, an accomplished sportsman, keen on golf and latterly on fishing, as attested by his daughter (personal interview), the many descriptions of fishing in the books and stories after 1968, and by his dedicating a book to the cartoonist Alex Graham as his golfing partner. His love of and knowledge of English countryside and wildlife pervades his early and late work. His middle period thrillers are mainly set overseas since "in England you can always call a policeman", as he is reported to have said.[8] In contrast, the 'Birdcage' books, beginning withFirecrest (1971) and including his masterpieceThe Rainbird Pattern (1972) which was awarded the CWA Silver Dagger and nominated for the Edgar awards, were all far darker and more realistic than any of his earlier thrillers. They do not have conventional happy endings. The settings are mostly in the south of England, and the villains are often sinister government officials who crush the innocent bystanders who might expose them.[9]

Works

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References

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  1. ^abcHiggins, John.Victor Canning biography
  2. ^Obituary,The Daily Telegraph, 26 February 1986, p. 12
  3. ^Thomas, David A. Victor Canning: Popular and now very Collectable Author', inBook and Magazine Collector issue 32. November 1986.
  4. ^Stefano Piastra,L’Appennino forlivese tra realtà e rappresentazione letteraria. The Chasm di Victor Canning (1947) inStudi Romagnoli, LXV, 2014, pp. 685-701 (in Italian)
  5. ^Bob OgleyKent: A Chronicle of the Century, Volume 3; Volume 6, (1996), p. 23, atGoogle Books
  6. ^Higgins, John. A Rex Carver Companion. Lulu.com, 2016;ISBN 9780557093717.
  7. ^Victor Canning page at Curtis Brown
  8. ^Obituary.The Times. 27 February 1986.
  9. ^Ripley, Mike.Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang: the boom in British thrillers from Casino Royale to The Eagle Has Landed (2017)

Sources

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  • Article by Graham Lord, "The crazy gamble that made Victor famous", in theSunday Express, 10 August 1975.
  • Interview from theWestern Daily Press published on 6 February 1976.
  • Obituaries inThe Times of 27 February 1986 andThe Daily Telegraph of 28 February 1986.
  • An article, "Victor Canning: Popular and now very collectable author of thrillers, comic novels, and mysteries."Book and Magazine Collector No. 32, November 1986, pages 41 – 47.
*Extended interviews with Canning's sister, Mrs Jean Tearle, his eldest daughter, Mrs Lindel Williams, and his literary executor, Mr Charles Collingwood.

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