Novelist, born in London, UK. He inherited the family wine business, but sold up in 1931 to concentrate on novel writing. He produced an enormously popular mix of satanism and historical fiction. Indicative titles in a lurid oeuvre are The Devil Rides Out (1935), The Scarlet Impostor (1942), and The Sultan's Daughter (1963). His three-volume autobiography was published posthumously (197880).
Dennis Yates Wheatley (8 January 1897 – 10 November 1977) was a British writer born in London.
Early Life
Dennis Yates(or Yeats) Wheatley was born in South London on 8 January 1897 to Albert David and Florence Elizabeth Harriet Wheatley (née Baker).
Military Service
He took part in the First World War but was gassed in a chlorine attack at Passchendaele and invalided out as a second lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery after seeing service in Flanders, on the Ypres Salient, and in France at Cambrai and St. Quentin.
During the Second World War, Wheatley's literary talents led him onto planning staffs for the War Office. He wrote numerous papers for the War Office, including drawing up suggestions for dealing with a German invasion of Britain (recounted in his work "Stranger than Fiction"). The most famous of his submissions to the Joint Planning Staff of the war cabinet was on "Total War".
Writing
His first book, Three Inquisitive People, was not immediately published;
He wrote adventure stories, with many books in a series of linked works.
In the 1960s his publishers were selling a million copies of his books per year. A small number of his books were made into films by Hammer, of which the best known is The Devil Rides Out (book 1934, film 1968). His writing is very descriptive and in many works he manages to introduce his characters into real events while meeting real people.
He also wrote non-fiction works, including accounts of the Russian Revolution and King Charles II, and his autobiography.
Fifty-two of Wheatley's novels were published in a set by Heron Books.
His estate library was sold in a catalogue sale by Basil Blackwell's in the 1970s, and indicates a thoroughly well-read individual with wide-ranging interests particularly in historical fiction and Europe.
Politics
His work is fairly typical of his class and era; If one can leave this to one side, however, his works are enjoyable pulp thrillers, and his "Roger Brook" series in particular offer the reader "history without tears" (Wheatley, in the introduction to The Man Who Killed the King.
In the winter of 1947 Wheatley penned 'A Letter to Posterity' which he buried in an urn at his stately home. Dennis Wheatley, A Letter to Posterity
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