Peter Pook
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Peter Pook is a pseudonym for a British author of humorous novels.
Writing between 1960 and 1980, Peter Pook produced a series of twenty 'autobiographical' novels in which the real events of his life were mingled with fanciful situations, and Pook himself is presented as an amiable dunderhead who is taken advantage of at every turn. After the first book in the series, 'Banking on Form', every subsequent volume has Pook's name in the title: 'Pook in Boots', 'Pook in Business', 'Pook Sahib', etc.
Recurring themes in the books are Pook's obsession with physical culture and sport, his military career in the Royal Marines, overseas travels, his ambition to be an actor and his own writing career. The earlier books are totally light-hearted, though in some of the later works, particularly those depicting the war years, occasional glimpses of grim reality break in.
Ironically, after twenty volumes of autobiography, Pook's real name and real life history remained well-kept secrets.
Peter Pook, Brilliant wit and author of twenty-three uproariously funny books, died suddenly on 8th September 1978, an irredeemable loss to the world of humour. Born John Anthony Miller on the 25th April 1918. In Falmouth, he grew up in Southsea and was educated at Portsmouth Grammar School. At various times in his life he was a boxer, footballer, bank clerk, diver, Royal Marine, Indian Navy Lieutenant, antique dealer, schoolmaster, lecturer and author. His first novel, Banking on Form, was published and reprinted by Robert Hale in March, 1962, when he was forty four, but his sense of humour won him a national liteary competition when he was only nine.
Although he has used his own background to impart authenticity to his novels, his characters are fictitious in so far as they do not reflect any single person in his or her entirety. Often they are a composite of several quite different people, who, once created, develop a personality uniquely their own. Honors is a good example of this.
Peter wrote his own blurbs (i.e. description of the book printed on the inside and the biographical details printed on the back of the jacket). A sound philosophy underlies much of his geniality and his mastery of the written word would be difficult to surpass.
His wife the author Val Miller (pen name Val Manning) wrote that “ He also enjoyed a lasting amour with historical London and the liteary giants who flourished there. One of those was William Shakespeare who had established himself as a playwright of some esteem in London by the time he was twenty-five and whose works delighted Peter’s language palate. Dickens London and in particular 48 Doughty street where Dickens lived from 1837 – 39, reaped many of his leisure hours and he could quote at random from Dickens’ works with fluent ease. It is also an interesting fact that Peter’s father was born opposite Dickens' birthplace at Portsmouth. Peter never tired of the old city walks, St Paul’s, the churches, the bridges, the inns, the Thames and the quaint streets with names to conjure delicious imageries of an historic populace. He courted them all.
[edit] Bibliography
- Banking on form (1962)
- Pook in boots (1963)
- Pook in business (1963)
- Bwana Pook (1965)
- Professor Pook (1966)
- Banker Pook confesses (1967)
- Pook and Partners (1969)
- Playboy Pook (Oct 1970)
- Pook's Class War (1971)
- Pook's Tale of Woo (1972)
- Pook's Eastern Promise (1972)
- Beau Pook Proposes (1973)
- Pook's Tours (1974)
- Pook in Business (1974)
- Teacher's Hand-Pook (1975)
- Gigolo Pook (1975)
- Pook Omnibus: "Pook in Boots","Pook Sahib","Professor Pook" (1976)
- Pook's Love Nest (1976)
- Pook at College (1977)
- Pook's China Doll (1977)
- Pook's Curiosity Shop (1977)
- Marine Pook Esquire (1978)
- Pook's Viking Virgins (1979)
- Pook's Tender Years (1980)
Books Available from www.manuscriptresearch.co.uk