Chaille Trevor’s part memoire and part appraisal of her late
husband Elleston Trevor’s books is subtitled ‘intimate glimpses into his life
and work’ (e-book, 2012). The profile on Quiller, his shadowy secret agent,
is written by Elleston Trevor (Adam Hall) and is only three pages, though
enlightening.
Elleston Trevor was a prolific author, first published in 1943
under his own name of Trevor Dudley Smith; he used at least eight other
pen-names. A good number of his books were re-issued either as by Elleston
Trevor or by Adam Hall. He wrote in several genres – mainstream, children’s,
thrillers, espionage, mysteries and plays – until his death in 1995.
The recent sad death of author Philip Kerr brings Elleston
Trevor to mind. Kerr bravely fought cancer, determined to deliver his last
manuscript, Metropolis (his
fourteenth Bernie Gunther novel) to his publisher.
Elleston Trevor had shown similar determination when working
on his nineteenth Quiller novel, Balalaika.
He dictated the final paragraphs to his son, Jean Pierre. As Chaille says, ‘Inside
Quiller’s head we live the close of a novel, and of a master’s life, with a
breath of poetry.’ When the inevitability of death sank in, he had chosen not
to fight it but to go forward to meet it. ‘Elleston moved on with Quiller-like
mettle toward his last challenges: finishing Balalaika, dying gracefully, and beginning a new life. As he saw
it, consciousness continues; an ending is a beginning.’
Chaille and Jean Pierre took Elleston’s ashes to the top a
mountain that overlooks the family ranch in Show Low, Arizona…
Throughout, Chaille uses quotes and references from many of
his twenty-one children’s books, where he could employ his poetic muse. His
Hugo Bishop mysteries, each with a chess title (published in the 1950s) were
re-issued under his Adam Hall name when the Quiller books became best-sellers. There’s a lengthy appraisal of his 1970 novel Bury Him Among Kings, which is about a
family in the First World War and a lot besides.
Elleston Trevor had a great thirst for knowledge and
believed that life was to be lived, yet surprisingly managed to write so many
books!
Chaille Trevor has produced a moving memoire.
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