English
mystery writer, whose career has spanned over 50 years. Gilbert
have published thrillers, espionage and police procedural novels.
His highly entertaining works have gained wide audience with
their complex plotting, detailed settings, and well portrayed
characters. Gilbert's work show the durability of the traditional
detective novel in Britain.
Michael Gilbert was born in Lincolnshire. He
was educated at St. Peter's School, Seaford, Sussex, Blundell's
School (1926-31), and at University of London, earning LL.B.
with honors in 1937. During World War II from 1939 to 1945 he
served in the Royal Horse Artillery in North Africa and Europe.
He was captured and imprisoned in North Africa, which experience
he later used in the novel DEATH IN THE CAPTIVITY (1952). After
the war Gilbert worked as a solicitor (1947-51), and became
in 1952 a partner in the law firm of Trower, Still, and Kealing.
In his early days as a London solicitor he became legal adviser
to Raymond Chandler.
Gilbert was a founding member of the British
Crime Writers Association. In 1988 he was named a Grand Master
by the Myster Writers of America, and he won the Life Achievement
Anthony Award at the 1990 Bouchercon in London. In 1980 Gilbert
was knighted as a Commander in the Order of the British Empire.
Besides crime novels Gilbert has written short stories and plays.
Author' legal background has contributed to exellent novels
about law, young solicitors, and courtroom procedures. Gilbert
has also edited a book of legal anecdotes.
As a mystery novelist, Gilbert made his debut
with CLOSE QUARTERS (1947). It introduced Inspector Hazelrigg,
master of deduction, who is one of the earliest realistic British
policemen in fiction. Red-faced, bulky inspector has an even
disputation and more than 30 years of experience, ranging from
cases involving fascist organizations attempting to subvert
the British government in the late 1930s, to cases in his post-World
War II specialty - black market. A cat in his office sometimes
lies at his feet while he naps. The dedicated inspector has
appeared in several mysteries set to the London underworld,
the Soho trattorias and nightclubs, and the gangland down by
the docks.
Another Gilbert's favorite series character,
an insomniac solicitor Bohun, was first seen in the classic
novel SMALLBONE DECEASED (1950). Bohun's background gives him
many talents: he has been a medical student, an actuary, a research
statistician, a soldier during WWII . Finally he has chosen
a legal career at the office of Horniman, Birley, and Crane,
a respectably firm of London solicitors. In THE CRACK IN THE
TEACUP (1966) the hero was also a young solicitor and finds
himself involved in a major campaign against racketeering.
In the postwar caper THE DOORS OPEN (1949),
Gilbert made an excursion to the world of high finance. The
book was written on a commuter train. In the story one of the
protagonists, Paddy Yeatman-Carter, sees a man attempt suicide
on a commuter train. When the man shows up dead next day, Paddy
and his friend Nap Rumbold, a lawyer, become suspicious of the
dead man's employers, an insurance company.
GAME WITHOUR RULES (1967), a collection of spy
stories, appeared in the ultra-heroic age of agent fiction,
but reflected more the Kim Philby and Profumo spy scandals of
1950's and early 1960's Britain. The central characers are muscular
Calder and Behrens, who relies on his professional cover. They
are gentleman-spies, who operate mainly in England, and in most
cases try to stop upper-middle types pass secrets to the Soviets.
THE NIGHT OF THE TWELFTH (1976) was partly based on Gilbert's
experiences as a shoolmaster. The main plot concerns the torture-murders
of schoolboys. Another plot involves the the son of the Israeli
ambassador, who becomes a target for terrorists.
The courtroom drama THE QUEEN AGAINST KARL MULLEN
(1991) dealt with the situation in South-Africa and anti-apartheid
movement. The story was not written along the main vein of 'politically
correct' stories. It presented an unlikable South African security-chief
Karl Mullen, who has has come to England to try to extradite
black writer-activist Jack Katanga, who's wanted back home for
murdering a policeman. When Katanga suddenly dies, Mullen is
the obvious suspect. Gilbert's ROLLER-COASTER (1993) returned
to the character of Patrick Petrella, a Spanish-English Scotland
Yard investigator. This time Petronella solves a murder case
involving a police informer and uncovers a smuggling ring that
stretches across the North Sea to the sleazier side of Amsterdam.
Patrick Petrella is a hardworking member of
the Metropolitan Police, London. His first cases appeared in
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine in the late 1950s. Petrella
has progressed from a sergeant to a Detective Superintendent.
Off duty he enjoys a glass of port and a good book. He is respected
by his fellow officers and solved every type of crime. In ROLLER
COASTER (1993) resigns when his own views conflict with the
justice system. Petrella's attention to details and interest
in people is seen already in the early story 'The Secon Skin'
(1958).
In RING OF TERROR (1995) Gilbert broke new ground:
a historical thriller set in the pre-WW I East End, with the
theme of social class. The protagonist is admirable, ambitious,
a bit naive Russian-speaking constable Luke Pagan. He investigates
with his unorthodox partner, Joe Narrabone, an anarchist conspiracy
after a series of violent events succeeds in spreading unease
throughout Edwardian London. INTO BATTLE (1997) continued the
story of Luke Pagan, who joins on the eve of World War I a brand
new intelligence agency and goes into battle against a legion
of German spies.
In 1997 appeared THE MAN WHO HATED BANKS AND
OTHER MYSTERIES, a tribute to Gilbert's 50th anniversary as
a published author. The collection of 18 stories featured four
of his characters: Chief Inspector Hazlerigg, solicitor Henry
Bohun, Inspector Patrick Petrella, and tough-guy Mercer. OVER
AND OUT (1998) focused again on the life of Luke Pagan. The
story is set in the years of the First World War, when the morale
of the troops has gone down and large-scale desertion is becoming
a real likelihood. Luke, working for the Intelligence Corps,
is asked to investigate an organisation run by a Belgian traitor
which encourages British soldiers to abandon the trenches and
go over to the other side.