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Date | Amendment / addition | Link to new / amended area |
15th December 2020 |
As is our custom, this month's update has a Christmas theme. In the 'cards sent by DW' section we have, thanks to Steve Whatley, a suggestion of what DW's Christmas card of 1937 looked like. Meanwhile, in the 'cards sent to DW' section, we can add a card sent to DW by Major-General Geoffrey White, a soldier of the Second Boer War, and later the Commandant of the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich. I have also, thanks to observations from Steve Whatley and Jonathan McColl, done some tidying up of various parts of the site, most notably updating some of the links in the 'Broadcasts' section. My thanks to all the many supporters of this site for the interest and support they have given me in this and other years, and my best wishes for an incident free, happy and prosperous Christmas when it comes along, and for 2021. Charles B. |
Christmas cards sent by Dennis Wheatley Christmas cards sent to Dennis Wheatley |
23rd November 2020 |
As mentioned in the last update, I have recently received some new material from a couple of followers of the site. First, from Steve Whatley we have another discovery – that DW was the guest in the popular Woman's Hour programme on BBC Radio on 17th April 1956. Second, and thanks to Gaute Kongsnes in Norway, we now know what the covers of two of the Norwegian reprints, both of Roger Brook novels, look like. Both have rather attractive covers. Many thanks to you both, And please keep the intel coming ! I hope everyone is having a comfortable 'lockdown'. Charles |
Other Publications: Broadcasts Wheatley Around The World: Norway |
31st October 2020 |
Our 2020 Convention, the thirteenth, took place as planned on Saturday 31st October, and was held for the first time and due to current circumstances on 'zoom'. Some twenty people attended, and it was a tremendous success. The usual Convention Report will follow shortly. Meanwhile, and thanks to some recent material which has come my way, I am able to add some new and interesting items to the site's 'virtual Museum'. First, chronologically, is DW's leaving certificate from HMS Worcester. Second, and rather fitting given that we are close to Remembrance Sunday, is a portion of the map which DW used as a young officer during the battle of Passchendaele, and which he later framed and hung on a wall in his house to remind him of his flirtations with the grim reaper in the Great War. Finally, and from roughly the same era, we are now able to see what the interior of his home of the period, Clinton House in Streatham, looked like, due to the discovery of a family photo album. That the local council allowed the house to be ransacked and then demolished is still a great sadness to me. I should add that I have also received fresh material from Steve Whatley in the U.K. and from Gaute Kongsnes in Norway, and I will be putting these on the website later, and I hope they will forgive me for saving them up for a subsequent update so 'feast' is not followed by 'famine'. |
The DW Museum: The Early Years The DW Museum: World War I DW's Homes: Clinton House |
29th September 2020 |
Since various wartime anniversaries are going on at the moment, it seems appropriate to add a little more concerning DW's secret wartime work. First of all, I have added to last month's update about the beautiful double agent that DW looked after at the start of the war something that I have only just learned - that DW's stepson William Younger was so taken with her that he proposed marriage. Second, a few of us have always wondered if DW was a party to the war's most closely held secret, 'Ultra' – or that England had broken 'Enigma' and other top secret enemy codes. Thanks to the original typescript of what was to become 'The Deception Planners', we now have the answer, and it is as amusing as it interesting. Yes he was, but his commanding officer, Johnny Bevan, was unaware that he knew ! Finally, for those who are attending this year's 'virtual Convention', a reminder that it will take place on Halloween (Saturday 31st October). For those attending, I've put a link to the programme on the Conventions page. |
The Museum: World War Two / 1 The Museum: World War Two / 2 Dennis Wheatley Conventions |
31st July 2020 |
My apologies for the lack of a June update. This months' updates are mostly 'Museum' related. First-of-all, having had a fascinating and enjoyable correspondence with one of her descendants, I have decided to put a little more on one of the opening pages on World War Two about 'Fritzi' Gartner (née Stottinger), Maxwell Knight's double-agent whose cover story was that she was Dennis Wheatley's research assistant. Elsewhere, I had never, until last year, come across any of the collages that DW made to decorate his house using items from his stamp collection. Jonathan Frost very kindly filled that gap for me the best part of a year ago, and the example he showed me now goes proudly on display on the website. And finally, with Covid-19 still very much in circulation, it will come as no surprise to any of you that we have decided to postpone our next 'physical' Convention. Instead, we will be making our next Convention, on Halloween, Saturday 31st October virtual, and we will all be attending via 'zoom' or similar. We still have a few places left, so if anyone would like to join and has not yet registered an interest with me, please do contact me as soon as possible. All with an interest in DW are welcome! |
The Museum: World War Two The 'Museum' Room Nine: One of DW's 'stamp collages' The 2020 Convention is going virtual ! |
15th May 2020 |
A May Miscellany Here are a few more recent discoveries to help keep the boredom away during 'lockdown' … First of all, the ever-vigilant Steve Whatley has come across some more foreign editions; an Italian edition of 'Murder Off Miami' probably dating from the mid 1980s, and Japanese editions of 'Murder Off Miami' and 'Who Killed Robert Prentice'. And second, we haven't quite got to the bottom of the magic box that came up for auction in January. Courtesy of the box, I've been able to add DW's sumptuous photo album from his days at Grove Place to the section of the Museum on DW's homes. I'm also able to add, courtesy of the same box, an intriguing little notebook from the early 1930s that could easily have gone missing over the ages and that sheds an interesting light on what life must have been like for DW as a struggling would-be author before the successful publication of 'The Forbidden Territory', revealing as it does that before his success with that and his short story 'The Snake', he had several publishing rejections. I've put a commentary beside it because what it tells us about DW in 1932 is interesting, and if anyone can tell me the precise word-count of the published 'Forbidden Territory', I will be very grateful – you'll understand why if you read this piece and look at the illustrations of the notebook pages … it's possible that the 'Forbidden Territory' we all enjoy is a slightly edited-down version of the original … |
Wheatley Around The World: Italy Wheatley Around The World: Japan The Museum: DW's Homes The Museum, Room Six: Instant success as an author |
16th April 2020 |
More 'Lost and Found' Last month I described how DW's long-lost first novel, 'Julie's Lovers' had turned up along with a handful of other interesting items in January in a London auction room. One of the other items in the cardboard box was DW's own copy (number one of four) of the first, 1963, edition of Iwan Hedman and Jan Alexandersson's bibliography of DW's works, 'Tre Decennium med Dennis Wheatley', or 'Three Decades with Dennis Wheatley', which was the first bibliography to be produced of DW's works in any language. Seeing this, it seemed to me that (1) I should reproduce part of it on the website, and (2) it would give me an opportunity to put what Bob Rothwell wrote about this bibliography in the early days of the website into an updated context. I have therefore prefaced Bob's excellent piece with a few words of introduction, and added illustrations of all the editions of Iwan's bibliography to the section, notwithstanding that they are recorded elsewhere on this site. I am pleased to say there was even more than this in the box, and some of the other contents will be shown on the website in the coming months ... Good luck to everybody in these troubled times. If I may quote Ken Gallacher on the subject: 'Keep Calm and read Dennis Wheatley' |
Four decades with Dennis Wheatley |
19th March 2020 |
'Lost and Found' At the 2012 Convention, I gave a short talk entitled 'Unpublished Wheatley' in which I listed the main pieces that DW was known or suspected to have written, and of which no copies were known. There were three novels (Julie's Lovers, Of Vice and Virtue and The Lusty Youth of Roger Brook, although it was then unclear if the last had ever really existed or not) and five shorter pieces. By the end of last year copies of the last two of the novels and three of the other pieces had been found, which I considered quite remarkable. I am delighted to say that we can now add the first full-length novel that DW ever wrote to that list. The original typescript of Julie's Lovers, which DW wrote as a teen-ager while under shell-fire in France in World War One plus part of the original manuscript were parts of a lot which came up for sale at one of the London Auction Rooms on 20th January this year. Fortunately they were purchased by someone with a close connection to this site, so they are in safe hands, which is good. If you can beat that for 'New Year good news', I will be very impressed. Don't hang up your hats yet though … apart from those few short written pieces, DW's dancing faun from WW2 days and the English version of the 1934 film of 'The Forbidden Territory' with its missing eight minutes have yet to be found … And while I'm on, best wishes to everybody in these difficult times … |
The Museum World War One |
13th January 2020 |
The New Year starts with the report on the twelfth Dennis Wheatley Convention, which was held at the end of October last year. The Convention took place on Saturday 26th October, and was held as before at the Manor Hotel in Elstree. If you are interested in attending our event in 2020, please keep an eye on the main Conventions and Field Trips page, although if we know of your interest already either I or one of our co-organisers will aim to keep you updated directly as well. This site wishes all its supporters a very happy New Year ! |
The twelfth Dennis Wheatley Convention 26th October 2019 |
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