Gilbert Frankau
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Gilbert Frankau (April 21, 1884- 4 November 1952) was a popular British novelist. He was known also for verse (he was a war poet of World War I) including a number of verse novels, and short stories. He was born in London into a Jewish family, but was baptised as an Anglican in 1913. He was educated at Eton College, and went into the family cigar business.
He served in the British Army from the outbreak of war in 1914, first in 9th Battalion of the East Surrey Regiment), and then with the rank of Captain as a gunner in 107th Brigade of the Royal Field Artillery, experience that he later used in novels. He fought in major battles of the British Expeditionary Force in France, and wrote for the Wipers Times, before being invalided out and given a posting in Italy. The family business not having survived the war, he became a writer.
His novels, while having conventional romantic content, also contained material from his own conservative politics, and meditations on Jewish identity in the climate of the times. Some of them were filmed (see Christopher Strong; If I Marry Again was based on a short story). His political ambitions were frustrated by the fact that he was a divorcee (he married three times), not acceptable in the Conservative Party of the time. He notoriously wrote a 1933 article As a Jew I am not Against Hitler for the Daily Express, shortly after Adolf Hitler had come to power in Germany; he later retracted his position.
Few of his works have survived in reputation.
His mother Julia Frankau (1864-1916), sister of Owen Hall, wrote under the name Frank Danby (and is said to have collaborated with George Moore). His daughter Pamela Frankau from his first marriage was at least as successful as a writer. Another daughter also wrote, and Timothy D'Arch Smith, writer and bibliographer, is a grandson.
[edit] Works
- Eton Echoes (1901) poems
- The XYZ of Bridge (1906)
- Jack - One of Us: A Novel in Verse (1912) also as One of Us
- Tid'apa (What Does It Matter?) (1914)
- A Song of the Guns in Flanders (1916) poems
- How Rifleman Brown Came To Valhalla (1916)
- The Woman of the Horizon: A Romance of Nineteen-Thirteen. (1917)
- One of Them: A Novelette in Verse (1918)
- The Judgement of Valhalla (1918)
- The Other Side, and Other Poems (1918)
- The City of Fear and Other Poems (1918)
- Peter Jackson, Cigar Merchant: A Romance of Married Life (1919)
- The Seeds of Enchantment (1921)
- The Love Story of Aliette Brunton (1922)
- Men, Maids and Mustard Pot (1923) short stories
- Peter Jameson: A Modern Romance (1923)
- Poetical Works (1923)
- Gerald Cranston's Lady (1924)
- Life - and Erica: A Romance (1924)
- The Dominant Type Of Man (1925) non-fiction
- My Unsentimental Journey (1926)
- Masterson, a Story of an English Gentleman (1926)
- Twelve Tales (1927)
- So Much Good: A Novel in a New Manner (1928)
- Martin Make-Believe (1930)
- Dance, Little Gentleman! (1930)
- Concerning Peter Jackson and Others (c.1930)
- Christopher Strong (1932)
- Wine, Women And Waiters (1932)
- The Lonely Man: A Romance of Love and the Secret Service (1932)
- Secret Services: A Collection of Tales (1934)
- Everywoman (1934)
- A Century of Love Stories (c.1935) editor
- Farewell Romance (1936)
- Three Stories Of Romance (1936) with Warwick Deeping and Ethel Mannin
- Experiments in Crime and Other Stories (1937)
- More Of Us: Being the Present-Day Adventures of "One of Us": A Novel in Verse (1937)
- The Dangerous Years: A Trilogy (1937)
- Royal Regiment: A Drama of Contemporary Behaviours (1938)
- Gilbert Frankau's Self Portrait: A Novel of His Own Life (1940)
- Winter of Discontent (1942) as Air Ministry Room 28 (1942) in US
- World Without End (1942)
- Escape to Yesterday (1942)
- Selected Verses (1943)
- Three Englishman: A Romance of Married Lives (1944)
- Michael's Wife (1948)
- Son of the Morning (1949)
- Oliver Trenton K.C. (1951)
- Unborn Tomorrow: A Last Story (1953)
- The Peter Jackson Omnibus