Gardner, John, 1926-2007
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Gardner, John, 1926-2007
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Gardner, John, 1926-2007
Gardner, John, 1926-
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Gardner, John, 1926-
Gardner, John E.
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Gardner, John E.
Gardner, John Edmund, 1926-....
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Gardner, John Edmund, 1926-....
Gardner, John (British writer)
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Gardner, John (British writer)
Gardner, John (John Edmund), 1926-2007
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Gardner, John (John Edmund), 1926-2007
GARDNER, John
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GARDNER, John
Gardner, John E. (1926-2007).
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Gardner, John E. (1926-2007).
Gardner, J.E. 1926-...
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Gardner, J.E. 1926-...
Gardner, John E. 1926-2007 (John Edmund),
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Gardner, John E. 1926-2007 (John Edmund),
Gardner, J. E. 1926-2007 (John Edmund),
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Gardner, J. E. 1926-2007 (John Edmund),
Gardner, John Edmund
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Gardner, John Edmund
ガードナー, ジョン
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ガードナー, ジョン
Gardner, John E., 1926-....
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Gardner, John E., 1926-....
McCoy, Edmund
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McCoy, Edmund
Gardner, J. E. 1926-2007
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Gardner, J. E. 1926-2007
Gardner, John Edmund, 1926-2007
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Gardner, John Edmund, 1926-2007
ガードナー, J
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ガードナー, J
McCoy, Edmund 1926-2007
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McCoy, Edmund 1926-2007
Gardner, J.E. 1926-.... (John Edmund),
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Gardner, J.E. 1926-.... (John Edmund),
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Biographical History
John Edmund Gardner was born in Northumberland, England on November 20, 1926. In the early years of World War II, he was a drummer boy with the Home Guard and also worked as a magician for the American Red Cross Entertainments Department. When he turned 18 at the end of 1944, he joined the Royal Navy and then was transferred to the Royal Marines, where he served in Asia and the Middle East. During the war, Gardner became an alcoholic. His addiction grew while he attended Cambridge University and then Oxford, where he received a degree in theology. He became an Anglican priest, married, and became the minister of a rural parish. After a few years, he resigned from the Church and renounced religion entirely. He got a job as a drama critic for the local newspaper in Straford-upon-Avon, but was soon forced to face his addiction to alcohol. In 1959, he came under the care of Dr. Lincoln Williams, who had pioneered the use of hypnosis in treating alcoholics. Gardner's struggle to overcome his addiction resulted in his first book, Spin the Bottle, which was published in 1964. He then took to writing novels, creating the character of the bumbling secret agent Boysie Oakes. Gardner was a prolific author, branching out into thrillers and adventure stories, including two popular Sherlock Holmes novels. He also developed the character of police inspector Derek Torry. In 1980, he was offered the James Bond franchise by the publishing firm Glidrose, which owned Ian Fleming's literary estate. His first attempt, Licence Renewed (1981), was successful, and he would go on to write fourteen Bond novels before giving it up in 1996 due to cancer. After 6 years, he resumed writing, producing the spy thriller Day of Absolution (2000) and the detective novel Bottled Spider (2002). He died in Basingstoke, England, on August 3, 2007.
Biography
John Edmund Gardner was born in Northumberland, England on November 20, 1926. He expressed a desire to be a writer at the age of eight, but his life would follow a circuitous path before he finally settled into that profession. A teenager during World War II, Gardner joined the Home Guard as a drummer boy. While waiting to come of age, he auditioned for the American Red Cross Entertainments Department and visited numerous military hospitals as a magician. Finally turning 18 at the end of 1944, he was able to join the Royal Navy. After a few months he was transferred to a Royal Marines commando unit and served in Asia and the Middle East.
During the war, Gardner became an alcoholic. His addiction grew while he attended Cambridge University and then Oxford, where he received a degree in theology. He followed his father in becoming an Anglican priest, and, after marrying his wife Margaret, became the minister to a rural parish. After a few restless years, however, Gardner realized that he had become a priest solely in an attempt to escape from his chronic alcoholism. He resigned from the Church and renounced religion entirely.
Gardner drifted into a job as drama critic for the local newspaper in Stratford-upon-Avon, just as the Royal Shakespeare Company was undergoing a major reorganization. He had finally realized his ambition to become a writer, but he was soon forced to face his debilitating addiction to alcohol. In 1959, he came under the care of Dr. Lincoln Williams, who had pioneered the use of hypnosis in treating alcoholics. Gardner's struggle to overcome his addiction resulted in his first book, Spin the Bottle, which was published in 1964. A harrowing account of the mind of an alcoholic, the book was a success, and it inspired Gardner to try writing a novel.
The first draft of Gardner's novel, a pretentious indictment of governmental abuse of power, was a disaster, and his editor suggested he try treating the theme as a comedy. Gardner rewrote the story, creating the character of bumbling secret agent and squeamish assassin Boysie Oakes. Hitting at the height of the spy craze in the mid-1960s, the book, entitled The Liquidator, was a hit. The sequel, Understrike (1965), scored again, and was followed by six more Boysie Oakes adventures, including Traitor's Exit (1970). Rod Taylor portrayed Boysie Oakes in the forgettable film version of The Liquidator (1965), directed by Jack Cardiff.
Gardner proved to be a prolific author, branching out into thrillers and adventure stories, including two popular Sherlock Holmes novels that focused on the detective's nemesis, Professor Moriarty. He also developed the character of police inspector Derek Torry, who appeared in two police procedurals, A Complete State of Death (1969) and The Corner Men (1974). Translated to the LAPD, Torry was brought to the screen by Charles Bronson in the 1973 flop The Stone Killer, directed by Michael Winner.
Then, in 1980, John Gardner was offered the James Bond franchise by the publishing firm Glidrose, which owned Ian Fleming's literary estate. His first attempt, Licence Renewed (1981), was successful, and he would go on to write fourteen Bond novels before giving it up in 1996. After a six-year bout with cancer, Gardner resumed writing, producing the spy thriller Day of Absolution (2000) and the detective novel Bottled Spider (2002). A widower and father of two, he lives in Basingstoke, England.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/110081076
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1383799
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n78041311
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n78041311
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Alcoholics
Armed Forces
Authors, English
Oakes, Boysie (Fictitious character)
Nationalities
Britons
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Great Britain
AssociatedPlace
Great Britain
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>