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C S Forester is back in fashion. 100 years after his birth the ITV serialisation of
the Hornblower series has won new recruits to the enthralling tales of naval warfare
in the Napoleonic wars. Fans know that Hornblower was only a small part of
C S Forester's output of 35 novels, 2 plays, 5 biographies, 3 childrens books and
histories, etc. Fans in and around Oxford wondered if there was enough interest to
set up a C S Forester Society, and bring together those interested in his works,
with collectors of his books, and provide a forum to broaden the knowledge
of his life and writings.
Abridged from 'A Very Short Biography of C S Forester' by John Forester
CS Forester, born in August, 1899, was the fifth and last child of George
Foster Smith and Sarah Medhurst Troughton. George Smith was an English
school teacher in Cairo, Egypt, in a school set up by the British protectorate to
give upper-class Egyptian boys a taste of English schooling. When Cecil was three,
the family broke up, Sarah and the children returning to London so the children could
attend English schools, while George remained teaching in Egypt, returning
for one month a year. During his childhood Cecil developed a line of stories that made
him out to be better than he was and got people to act as he desired. He adopted George
and Florence Belcher, whose sons were his schoolmates, as surrogate parents.
He was accepted at Guy's Medical School, using money that Geoff sent from his pay
as an Army doctor in World War I, but lazed away his time instead of attending.
It was not until he was aged 27 did he earn enough from his first writings to live on.
His first novel, A Pawn Among Kings, recalled his days playing Napoleonic
war games. It is about a fictional woman who causes Napoleon's recognised
mistakes by upsetting his judgement at crucial moments. His first successful
novel was Payment Deferred, a story "of grim horror almost unrelieved,"
about a man who is hanged for a murder he didn't commit because exonerating
himself would prove the murder that he had committed. On the success of
Payment Deferred, Cecil secretly married Kathleen Belcher, in whose parents'
house he had spent much time. He wrote a series of novels with military and
naval themes, include Brown on Resolution, Death of the French, The Gun, The
African Queen, and The General. He had, from the first, used the pen name of
CS Forester. Now nobody who met CSF even knew he was Cecil Smith, although
those who had known Cecil Smith knew he was the famous novelist CSF. He was
called to Hollywood to write a pirate film, working under Arthur Hornblow, in association
with Niven Busch. However, before they had finished the script, another studio released
Captain Blood, starring Errol Flynn, and using the same historical incidents that they
had counted on. Rather than seeking another position, hounded by the prospect of a
paternity suit from a fading opera singer, Cecil jumped aboard a freighted bound for home.
Another passenger was the photographer Barbara Sutro. In the voyage, he took a one-day
cruise around the Gulf of Fonseca in the ship's motor lifeboat, and by the end of the voyage
he had a new novel worked out, The Happy Return, with its characters Hornblower, Bush,
and Lady Barbara. Hornblower, with all his human indecisiveness and cross-grainedness,
was Cecil as he wished he had the courage to be, and Cecil wrote about Hornblower again and again.
At the start of World War II Cecil persuaded the British government to let him come
to America to write propaganda (news, film, short stories, and novels) to help keep America on Britain's side.
His work brought him recognition by admirals, generals, and Prime ministers. His official home was Berkeley,
California, for the rest of his working life. In 1943, he became partially crippled with atherosclerosis in his legs.
He and Kathleen were divorced in 1945. In 1947 he married, again secretly, another lady from the group of his
youth, Dorothy Foster. In August, 1964 he had a disabling stroke, and he died in April, 1966. Cecil and Kathleen
had two sons, John born in 1929, George in 1933. Cecil wrote an early autobiography, Long Before Forty
but his most complete and complex story was his own life.
Biography of C S Forester
'Novelist and Storyteller: The Life of C S Forester.' By John Forester.
2 vols, 826 pages, illustrated, index, trade paperback. First edition numbered and signed.
$45.00. ISBN 0-940558-04-1
John Forester will sell at the list price of $45.00, postpaid in the US (but $48.38 to California customers).
forester@johnforester.com
Sea Room Books and Tall Ships Books are also selling the book through their website bookstores.
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