Joseph Jefferson Farjeon
Joseph Jefferson Farjeon | |
---|---|
Born |
4 June 1883 London United Kingdom |
Died |
6 June 1955 (aged 72) Hove, Sussex, UK |
Occupation | Writer, playwright |
Joseph Jefferson Farjeon (4 June 1883 – 6 June 1955) was an English crime and mystery novelist, playwright and screenwriter.
Family
Farjeon was the grandson of the American actor Joseph Jefferson, after whom he was named.[1] His parents were Jefferson's daughter Maggie (1853–1935) and Benjamin Farjeon (1838–1903), a prolific Victorian novelist who was born in Whitechapel to an impoverished immigrant family who travelled widely before returning to England in 1868. Joseph Jefferson Farjeon's brothers were Herbert, a dramatist and scholar, and Harry, who became a composer. His sister Eleanor became a renowned children's author.[2] His daughter Joan Jefferson Farjeon (1913–2006) was a scene designer.[3]
Creepy skill
Farjeon worked for ten years for Amalgamated Press in London before going freelance, sitting nine hours a day at his writing desk.[4] One of Farjeon's best known works was a play, Number 17, which was made into a number of films, including Number Seventeen (1932) directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and joined the UK Penguin Crime series as a novel in 1939. He also wrote the screenplay for Michael Powell's My Friend the King (1932) and provided the story for Bernard Vorhaus's The Ghost Camera (1933).[5]
Farjeon's crime novels were admired by Dorothy L. Sayers, who called him "unsurpassed for creepy skill in mysterious adventures."[6] His obituarist in The Times talked on "ingenious and entertaining plots and characterization," while The New York Times, reviewing an early novel, Master Criminal (1924), states that "Mr. Farjeon displays a great deal of knowledge about story-telling... and multiplies the interest of his plot through a terse, telling style and a rigid compression." The Saturday Review of Literature called Death in the Inkwell (1942) an "amusing, satirical, and frequently hair-raising yarn of an author who got dangerously mixed up with his imaginary characters."[7]
Most of Farjeon's works had been forgotten, but the figure of Ben in Number 17 appeared again in a string of novels, including Ben on the Job (1932), reissued in 1955 and 1985. The House Opposite (1931), the first full-length original novel to feature Ben, is being reissued under the revived Collins Crime Club imprint in December 2015. The British Library reissued Mystery in White: A Christmas Crime Story in 2014,[8] and two further novels in 2015: Thirteen Guests and The Z Murders. Mystery in White is also one of at least three of his novels to have appeared in Italian translations.[9] Others appeared in German,[10] French, and other languages.
Selected works
Crime fiction
- The Master Criminal. (London, Brentano's, 1924)
- The Confusing Friendship. (London, Brentano's, 1924)
- Little Things That Happen. (London, Methuen, 1925)
- Uninvited Guests. (London, Brentano's, 1925)
- No 17. (London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1926)
- At the Green Dragon. (London, Harrap, 1926)
- The Crook's Shadow. (London, Harrap, 1927)
- More Little Happenings. (London, Methuen, 1928)
- The House of Disappearance. (New York, A. L. Burt, 1928)
- Underground. (New York, A. L. Burt, 1928)
- Shadows by the Sea. (London, Harrap, 1928)
- The Appointed Date. (London, 1929)
- The 5:18 Mystery. (1929)
- The Person Called Z. (1930)
- The Mystery on the Moor. (London, Collins, 1930)
- The House Opposite. (London, Collins, 1931)
- Murderer's Trail. (London, Collins, 1931)
- The Z Murders. (London, Collins, 1932)
- Trunk Call. (London, Collins, 1932)
- Ben Sees It Through. (London, Collins, 1932)
- Sometimes Life's Funny. (London, Collins, 1933)
- The Mystery of the Creek. (London, Collins, 1933)
- Dead Man's Heath. (London, Collins, 1933)
- Old Man Mystery. (London, Collins, 1933)
- Fancy Dress Ball. (London, Collins, 1934)
- The Windmill Mystery. (London, Collins, 1934)
- Sinister Inn. (London, Collins, 1934)
- Little God Ben. (London, Collins, 1935)
- Holiday Express. (London, Collins, 1935)
- Thirteen Guests. (London, Collins, 1936)
- Detective Ben. (London, Collins, 1936)
- Dangerous Beauty. (London, Collins, 1936)
- Holiday at Half Mast. (London, Collins, 1937)
- Mystery in White. (1937)
- Dark Lady. (1938)
- End of An Author. (1938)
- Seven Dead. (1939)
- Exit John Horton. (1939)
- Aunt Sunday Sees It Through. (1940)
- Room Number Six. (1941)
- The Third Victim. (1941)
- Death in the Inkwell. (1942)
- The Judge Sums Up. (1942)
- The House of Shadows. (1943)
- Greenmask. (1944)
- Black Castle. (1945)
- The Oval Table. (1946)
- Peril in the Pyrenees. (1946)
- Back To Victoria. (1947)
- The Adventure at Eighty. (1948)
- Prelude To Crime. (1948)
- The Impossible Guest. (1949)
- The Shadow of Thirteen. (1949)
- The Disappearances of Uncle David. (1949)
- Cause Unknown. (1950)
- The House Over the Tunnel. (1951)
- The Adventure For Nine. (1951)
- Ben on the Job. (1952)
- Number Nineteen. (1952)
- The Double Crime. (1953)
- Money Walks. (1953)
- Castle of Fear. (1954)
- The Caravan Adventure. (1955)
Plays
- Number 17
- Enchantment (1927)
Short stories
- The Tale of A Hat (A Romance of the Thames) Pearson's Magazine issue 172 April 1910
- Waiting for the Police (1943)
Under the pseudonym Anthony Swift
- Murder at a Police Station (1943)
- November the Ninth at Kersea (1944)
- Interrupted Honeymoon (1945)
Bibliography
- Bordman, Gerald Martin. American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1914–1930. Oxford University Press, 1995.
- Krueger, Christine L. Encyclopedia of British Writers, 19th Century. Infobase Publishing, 2003.
References
- ↑ Martin Edwards's Introduction to the 2014 reissue of Mystery in White. A Christmas Crime Storey (London: British Library, [1937]).
- ↑ Lewis Melville, "Farjeon, Benjamin Leopold (1838–1903)", rev. William Baker. ODNB, Oxford University Press, 2004 Retrieved 21 November 2014, pay-walled.
- ↑ Obituary in The Independent, 14 August 2006. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ↑ Publisher's biographical note in the Penguin Crime edition of the novelized No. 17.
- ↑ IMDb. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ↑ Martin Edwards...
- ↑ gadetection site. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ↑ Martin Edwards...
- ↑ As Sotto la neve. Polillo Editore site (in Italian) Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ↑ Drei Raben Verlag (in German) Retrieved 21 November 2014.