Robin Estridge  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 06:00, 17 June 2024
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Current revision
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Line 4: Line 4:
|} |}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-'''Robin Estridge''', a.k.a. '''Robin York''' and '''Philip Loraine''' (1920 – 2002) was a British [[author]] of [[suspense fiction]] and a [[screenwriter]].+'''Robin Estridge''' (1920 – 2002) was a [[British author]] of [[suspense fiction]] and a [[screenwriter]]. He used many pseudonyms.
==Biography== ==Biography==

Current revision

"... You will meet a tall dark stranger, and go on a journey , ' ” he said, mincing. And suddenly the grin vanished. He took a pace forward so that for a moment his dark eyes, fierce with an inexplicable fury, were close to the ..."--The Break in the Circle: A Novel (1951) by Philip Loraine

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Robin Estridge (1920 – 2002) was a British author of suspense fiction and a screenwriter. He used many pseudonyms.

Biography

He was born Robin Phillip Lorraine Estridge on 1 May 1920, in London, England.

His real name was Robin Estridge, but he mostly published novels under the name of Robin York and Philip Loraine. Today, he has been somewhat forgotten by many readers as well as collectors of crime fiction. Sea Change (1982) is one of his best-known novels.

An introductory note to And to My Beloved Husband written under the pseudonym Philip Loraine (Ace Books, N.Y., year of publication missing, originally published by M.S. Mill Co, 1950) provides the following information about the author:

"Philip Loraine has published a number of top-notch suspense novels in the United States, and under his real name has written other books, as well as film and television scripts."

Loraine has also been a sailor in the Royal Navy, a theatrical designer, a dishwasher in Paris, a journalist, and a tubercular patient. Besides five years in the United States, he also resided in Corsica, Italy, Yugoslavia, Spain and, as seldom as possible, his native England. He liked writing, peace and quiet, sunshine, and new places. He disliked bad food, bad manners, people who think of themselves as intellectual, bigotry, politics, and politicians.

Estridge died on 24 October 2002 in Astoria, Oregon.

Selected novels

  • White Lie the Dead (Hodder, 1950)
  • Exit with Intent (Stoughton, 1950)
  • And to my Beloved Husband (M&S, 1950)
  • The Break in The Circle (H&S, 1951) (filmed as Break in the Circle in 1955)
  • The Dublin Nightmare (H&S, 1951) (filmed as Dublin Nightmare in 1958)
  • The Angel of Death (H&S, 1961)
  • Day of the Arrow (Collins, 1964) (filed as Eye of the Devil in 1966)
  • W.I.L One to Curtis (Collins, 1967)
  • The Dead Men of Sestos (Collins, 1968)
  • A Mafia Kiss (Collins 1969)
  • Photographs Have Been Sent to Your Wife (Collins, 1971)
  • Voices in an Empty Room (Collins, 1973)
  • Ask the Rattlesnake (Collins, 1975)
  • Lions Ransom (Collins, 1980)
  • Sea Change (Collins, 1982)
  • Death Wishes (Collins, 1983)
  • Gold and the Dance of Death (unpublished, 1990s)
  • Dead Men are Dangerous (unpublished, 1990s)

Screenwriting credits





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Robin Estridge" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools