Dick Francis

Dick Francis




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For the science fiction illustrator, see Dick Francis (illustrator).
Richard Stanley Francis CBE FRSL (31 October 1920 – 14 February 2010) was a British[1] crime writer, and former steeplechase jockey, whose novels centre on horse racing in England.
31 October 1920
Lawrenny, Pembrokeshire, Wales
Mary Margaret (née Brenchley; m. 1947–2000); her death
After wartime service in the RAF, Francis became a full-time jump-jockey, winning over 350 races and becoming champion jockey of the British National Hunt. He came to further prominence in 1956 as jockey to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, riding her horse Devon Loch which fell when close to winning the Grand National. Francis retired from the turf and became a journalist and novelist.
All his novels deal with crime in the horse-racing world, with some of the criminals being outwardly respectable figures. The stories are narrated by the main character, often a jockey, but sometimes a trainer, an owner, a bookie, or someone in a different profession, peripherally linked to racing. This person always faces great obstacles, often including physical injury. More than forty of these novels became international best-sellers.
Francis was born in Coedcanlas, Pembrokeshire, Wales.[2] Some sources report his birthplace as the inland town of Lawrenny, but at least two of his obituaries stated his birthplace as the coastal town of Tenby.[3][4] His autobiography says that he was born at his maternal grandparents' farm at Coedcanlas on the estuary of the River Cleddau,[5] roughly a mile north-west of Lawrenny. His mother had likely returned to her parents' home to give birth, as was the custom. He was the son of a jockey and stable manager[6] and his wife. Francis grew up in Maidenhead in Berkshire, England.[7] He left school at 15 without any qualifications,[8] intending to become a jockey; by the time he was 18, in 1938, he also was training horses.[9]
In October 1945, he met Mary Margaret Brenchley (17 June 1924 – 30 September 2000)[8] at a cousin's wedding. In most interviews, they commented that it was love at first sight. (Francis has some of his characters fall similarly in love within moments of meeting, as in the novels Flying Finish, Knockdown, and The Edge.) Their families were not entirely happy with their engagement, but Dick and Mary were married in June 1947 in London. She had earned a degree in English and French from London University at the age of 19, was an assistant stage manager, and later worked as a publisher's reader. She also became a pilot, and her experience of flying contributed to many novels, including Flying Finish, Rat Race, and Second Wind. She contracted polio while pregnant with their first child. (Francis drew from this in his novel Forfeit, which he named as one of his favorites.) They had two sons, Merrick and Felix[8] (born 1953).[10]
For nearly 30 years, Francis lived in Blewbury in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire). In the 1980s, he and his wife moved to Florida in the United States. In 1992, they moved to the Cayman Islands, where Mary died of a heart attack in 2000. In 2006, Francis had a heart bypass operation;[citation needed] in 2007 his right foot was amputated.[11] He died of natural causes on 14 February 2010 at his Caribbean home in Grand Cayman,[12] survived by both sons.[13][14][15][16]
During the Second World War, Francis volunteered, hoping to join the cavalry. Instead, he served in the Royal Air Force, initially as a member of ground crew and later piloting fighter and bomber aircraft, including the Spitfire and Hurricane fighters,[8] and the Wellington and Lancaster bombers.[17] He received an emergency commission as a pilot officer on 29 July 1944,[18] and was promoted war-substantive flying officer on 29 January 1945.[19] Much of his six-year service career was spent in Africa.[2]
After leaving the RAF in 1946, Francis became a highly successful jockey, reaching celebrity status in the world of British National Hunt racing.[6] He won over 350 races, becoming champion jockey in the 1953–54 season.[6]
Shortly after becoming a professional, he was offered the prestige job of first jockey to Vivian Smith, Lord Bicester.[20][21]
From 1953 to 1957 Francis was jockey to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother.[22] His best remembered moment as a jockey came while riding the Queen Mother's horse, Devon Loch, in the 1956 Grand National, when the horse inexplicably fell when close to winning the race.[23][24] Decades later, Francis considered losing that race his greatest regret and called it "a disaster of massive proportions".[2]
Francis suffered a number of racing injuries. He was first hospitalized from riding at the age of 12 when a pony fell on him and broke his jaw and nose.[20] He drew from this career resulting in broken bones and damaged organs for his novels, in which his characters suffer the same. In 1957, after Francis suffered another serious fall, the Queen Mother's adviser, Lord Abergavenny, advised him that she wanted him to retire from racing for her.
In 1983, the Grand National at Aintree Racecourse in England "stood at the brink of extinction," according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. News reporter Don Clippinger wrote,
"Britain's Jockey Club negotiated a $14 million deal to buy the land and save the race forever. The only problem was that the Jockey Club did not have $14 million, so two prominent racing personalities—Lord Derby and novelist Dick Francis—were selected to raise the money in a worldwide campaign".[25] Other philanthropists, including Charles C. Fenwick Jr., who rode Ben Nevis to victory in the 1980 Grand National, and Paul Mellon, an American breeder and racing enthusiast, also contributed to saving the race.
Francis wrote more than 40 international best-sellers. His first book was his autobiography The Sport of Queens (1957); he was offered the aid of a ghostwriter but rejected the idea.[26] The book's success led to his becoming the racing correspondent for London's Sunday Express newspaper, and he continued in that job for 16 years.
He set his first thriller, Dead Cert, published in 1962, in the world of horse racing, establishing a specialized niche for his work. Subsequently he regularly produced a novel a year for the next 38 years, missing only 1998 (during which he published a short-story collection). Although all his books were set against a similar background, his male protagonists held a variety of jobs, including artist (In the Frame and To the Hilt), investigator for the Jockey Club (Slay-Ride and The Edge), pilot (Rat Race and Flying Finish), and wine merchant (Proof). All the novels are narrated by the hero, who in the course of the story learns that he is more resourceful, brave, tricky, than he had thought, and usually finds a certain salvation for himself as well as bestowing it on others. Details of other people's occupations fascinated Francis, and he explores the workings of such fields as photography, accountancy, the gemstone trade, and restaurant service on transcontinental trains—but always in the interest of the plot. Dysfunctional families were a subject which he also exploited (Reflex, a baleful grandmother; Hot Money, a multi-millionaire father and serial ex-husband; Decider, the related co-owners of a racecourse).
Francis rarely re-used his lead characters. Only two heroes were used more than once; injured ex-jockey turned one-armed private investigator Sid Halley (Odds Against, Whip Hand, Come to Grief, Under Orders, also in Refusal by Felix Francis after his father's death) and Kit Fielding (Break In and Bolt).
According to a columnist for the Houston Chronicle, Francis "writes believable fairy tales for adults—ones in which the actors are better than we are but are believable enough to make us wonder if indeed we could not one day manage to emulate them."[27]
Francis described a typical year of research and writing to an interviewer in 1989:
In January, he sits down to write, staring down the barrel of a deadline. "My publisher comes over in mid-May to collect the manuscript," he says, "and it's got to be done."
The book's publication takes place in England in September. American publication in past years has been in February, although his next book, Straight, is set to be published in November. Once the manuscript is out of his hands, he takes the summer off, while percolating the plot of his next book. Research on the next book begins in late summer and continues through the autumn, while he's gearing up for his promotional tour for the just-published book. Come January, he sits down to write again.
He doesn't like book tours. He is not one for revelations, major life changes, and intimacies with strange interviewers, and he says he gets tired of answering the same questions again and again.
He shuns the lecture circuit. He'd prefer to let his novels and his sales volume speak for themselves... And though he doesn't love the act of writing [and] could easily retire, he finds himself planning his new book as each summer ends.
He says, "Each one, you think to yourself, 'This is the last one,' but then, by September, you're starting again. If you've got money, and you're just having fun, people think you're a useless character."
Or, as independently wealthy Tor Kelsey says in The Edge, explaining why he works for a minuscule salary: "I work... because I like it, I'm not all that bad at what I do, really, and it's useful, and I'm not terribly good at twiddling my thumbs."[28]
Francis collaborated extensively in his fiction with his wife, Mary, until her death. Learning this was a surprise to some readers and reviewers.[29][30] He credited her with being a great researcher for the novels. In 1981, Don Clippinger interviewed the Francises for The Philadelphia Inquirer and wrote,
"When Dick Francis sits down each January to begin writing another of his popular mystery-adventure novels, it is almost a certain bet that his wife, Mary, has developed a new avocation... For instance, in Rat Race, [the protagonist] operated an air-taxi service that specialized in carrying jockeys, trainers and owners to distant race courses. Before that book came out in 1970, Mrs. Francis obtained a pilot's license and was operating an air-taxi service of her own. Francis' newest novel, Reflex, is built around photography, and sure enough, Mary Francis has become accomplished behind the camera and in the darkroom... And, in their condominium, they have set up the subject of his 20th novel [Twice Shy] – a computer. While he is touring the country, she is working on new computer programs."[31]
According to journalist Mary Amoroso, "Mary does much of the research: She went so far as to learn to fly a plane for Flying Finish. She also edits his manuscripts, and serves as sounding board for plot line and character development. Says Francis, 'At least the research keeps her from going out shopping.'"[28] Francis told interviewers Jean Swanson and Dean James,
Mary and I worked as a team. ... I have often said that I would have been happy to have both our names on the cover. Mary's family always called me Richard due to having another Dick in the family. I am Richard, Mary was Mary, and Dick Francis was the two of us together.[2]
Francis's manager (and co-author of his later books) was his son Felix, who left his post as teacher of A-Level Physics at Bloxham School in Oxfordshire in order to work for his father. Felix was the inspiration behind a leading character, a marksman and physics teacher, in the novel Twice Shy. The older son, Merrick, was a racehorse trainer and later ran his own horse transport business, which inspired the novel Driving Force.
Father and son collaborated on four novels. Since his father's death, Felix has carried on to publish novels with his father's name in the title, including a return for Sid Halley (Dick Francis's Refusal, 2013).
Francis is the only three-time recipient of the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award for Best Novel, winning for Forfeit in 1970, Whip Hand in 1981, and Come To Grief in 1996. Britain's Crime Writers Association awarded him its Gold Dagger Award for fiction in 1979 and the Cartier Diamond Dagger Lifetime Achievement Award in 1989. He was granted another Lifetime Achievement Award. Tufts University awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1991.
In 1996 he was given the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award, the highest honour bestowed by the MWA. In 2000, he was granted the Malice Domestic Award for Lifetime Achievement. He was created an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1983 and promoted to Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2000.[32]
Amoroso wrote in 1989, "And yet he has a keen sense of the evanescence of literary endeavors. 'Whole months of work can be gone in four hours,' he says ruefully. 'People say they can't put my books down, and so they read them in one sitting of four hours.' Francis has been long accustomed to celebrity as a British sports star, but today he is a worldwide phenomenon, having been published in 22 languages. In Australia, he is recognized in restaurants, from his book-jacket picture. He and Mary will see people reading the novels on planes and trains."[28]
Francis was elected in 1999 a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.[33]
His first novel, Dead Cert, was adapted as a film under the same title in 1974. Directed by Tony Richardson, it starred Scott Antony, Judi Dench and Michael Williams.[34] It was adapted again as Favorit (a Soviet made-for-television movie) in 1976.[35]
Francis's protagonist Sid Halley was featured in six TV movies made for the program The Dick Francis Thriller: The Racing Game (1979–1980), starring Mike Gwilym as Halley and Mick Ford as his partner, Chico Barnes. The first of the episodes, Odds Against, used a Francis title; the others were created for the program.
Three TV films of 1989 were adaptations of Bloodsport, In the Frame, and Twice Shy, all starring Ian McShane as protagonist David Cleveland, a character used only once by Francis, in the novel Slay-Ride.
High Stakes was adapted into a text adventure game by Mindscape for MS-DOS and Apple II.
Basis of the movie Dead Cert (1974)
Basis of the audio drama Breaking Point, starring Michael Kitchen
Daniel Roke, Australian horse breeder temporarily turned UK investigator
Edgar Award nominee
First Sid Halley novel
Henry Grey, groom/heir to earldom, pilot
Gene Hawkins, government security agent
Matt Shore, former airline pilot now flying charter
Neil Griffon, formerly antique dealer, then business consultant, acting as temporary trainer whilst his father is hospitalised
Edward Lincoln, movie actor who does his own stunts
David Cleveland, Jockey Club chief investigator
Randall Drew, gentleman and ex-jockey
Edgar Award winner, Gold Dagger winner
Philip Nore, jockey and photographer
Jonathan Derry, teacher, second part narrated by younger brother William Derry, jockey & later racing manager
Adapted into a ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC computer game, published by Mosaic Publishing
Andrew Douglas, anti-kidnapping consultant
ISBN 0-399-13179-5 / 978-0-399-13179-0 (USA edition)
Biography of Lester Piggott, later reissued as Lester
Ian Pembroke, former asst trainer, amateur jockey
Tor Kelsey, investigator for the Jockey Club
Derek Franklin, jockey & later jewelry firm owner
John Kendall, writer and survival skills expert
Freddie Croft, horse transport company owner
Edgar Award winner, Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize winner
Ben Juliard, jockey/politician's son
short stories:
1. "Raid at Kingdom Hill" (first appeared in The Times, 1975)
2. "Dead on Red"
3. "Song for Mona"
4. "Bright White Star" (first appeared in Cheshire Life, Christmas 1979)
5. "Collision Course"
6. "Nightmare" (first appeared in The Times, 13 April 1974)
7. "Carrot for a Chestnut" (first appeared in Sports Illustrated, 1970)
8. "The Gift" (first appeared as "A Day of Wine and Roses" in Sports Illustrated, 1973)
9. "Spring Fever" (first appeared in Women's Own magazine, 1980)
10. "Blind Chance" (first appeared as "Twenty-one Good Men and True" in Verdict of Thirteen: A Detection Club Anthology, 1979)
11. "Corkscrew"
12. "The Day of the Losers" (first appeared in Horse and Hound, February 1977)
13. "Haig's Death"
Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize winner
Captain Tom Forsyth, military officer
Nicholas "Foxy" Foxton, financial adviser
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
Mark Shillington, racing commentator
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
Sid Halley, former private investigator
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis; Dr Rankin is the first female protagonist/narrator in any of the books
written after Dick Francis's death by Felix Francis
Guilty Not Guilty: A Dick Francis Novel
written after Dick Francis’s death by Felix Francis
^ Our favourite thriller writer Dick Francis is back in the saddle, entertainment.timesonline.co.uk
^ a b c d Swanson, Jean; Dean James (2003). "An Interview with Dick Francis". The Dick Francis Companion. New York: Berkeley Prime Crime. pp. 1–10. ISBN 0-425-18187-1.
^ McGrath, Chris (16 February 2010). "Dick Francis: Champion jockey and best-selling thriller writer". The Independent. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
^ Thursby, Keith (15 February 2010). "Dick Francis dies at 89; champion jockey became best-selling British mystery writer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
^ Francis, Dick (1986) [First published 1957, updated 1982]. The Sport of Queens. New York: Penzler Books. p. 14. ISBN 0-445-40331-4. We loved the farm. It was our mother's home, and I was born there.
^ a b c Francis, Dick (1999). The Sport of Queens. London: Joseph. ISBN 978-0-330-33902-5. OCLC 59457268.
^ Nikkhah, Roya (1 September 2009). "Dick Francis interview for Even Money". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 5 September 2009.
^ a b c d "Obituary: Mary Francis". The Times. 6 October 2000. Retrieved 18 October 2009.[dead link]
^ Cook, Bruce (21 March 1989). "Novelist Dick Francis Still Rides The Wave of Success In 'The Edge'". The Spokesman-Review (Spokane Chronicle). Retrieved 18 October 2009.[dead link]
^ "Dick Francis - Biographies". dickfrancis.com. 30 December 2008. Archived from the original on 30 December 2008.
^ Hughes, Mark (15 February 2010). "Dick Francis, champion jockey turned thriller-writer, dies at 89". The Independent. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
^ Dick Francis, thriller writer and ex-jockey, dies[dead link]
^ "Author Dick Francis dies aged 89". BBC News. 14 February 2010. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
^ Reynolds, Stanley (14 February 2010). "Dick Francis obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 Novembe
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