Charles Henry Whiting | |
---|---|
Pen name | Duncan Harding, Ian Harding, John Kerrigan, Leo Kessler, Klaus Konrad, and Duncan Stirling |
Occupation | writer, history professor |
Language | English |
Alma mater | Leeds University |
Genre | fiction, history, travel |
Subject | Second World War, Ernest Hemingway, |
Notable works |
Lest I Fall (1956), York Blitz, 1942, Hemingway Goes To War |
Notable awards | George Dowty Prize at the 1956 Cheltenham Literature Festival |
Years active | 1956-2007 |
Spouse | Irma Krueger (m. 1948- d.2001) Gillian Tidmus (m.2005 - his death 2007) |
Children | Julian |
Charles Henry Whiting (18 December 1926 – 24 July 2007), was a British writer and military historian and with some 350 books of fiction and non-fiction to his credit, under his own name and a variety of pseudonyms including Duncan Harding,Ian Harding,John Kerrigan,Leo Kessler,Klaus Konrad,K.N. Kostov, and Duncan Stirling.
Born in the Bootham area of York, England, Whiting was the son of a fitter. He studied at the Nunthorpe Grammar School and left in 1943, at age 16, to join the British Army by lying about his age. Keen to be in on the wartime action, Whiting was attached to the 52nd Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment, and by age 18 saw duty in France, Holland, Belgium, and Germany in the latter stages of World War II, rising to the rank of sergeant. While still a soldier, he observed conflicts between the highest-ranking British and American generals which he would write about extensively in later years.
He demobbed in 1947 and married in 1948. After the war, he stayed on in Germany completing his A-levels via correspondence course and teaching English before being enrolled at Leeds University reading History and German Language. As an undergraduate, he was afforded opportunities for study at several European universities (including Cologne University (briefly), then Leeds (1949-1953), and Saarbrücken (1955–56),
He completed his first novel The Frat Wagon (1954) while still an undergraduate at Leeds; it was published by Jonathan Cape in 1954. Next followed three wartime thrillers: Lest I Fall (1956), which was awarded the George Dowty Prize at the 1956 Cheltenham Literature Festival, was optioned by Rank but never filmed, and which financed Whiting's study tour in North America and led on to a contract with the University of Maryland University College, which at that time was providing degree courses for US military officers stationed in Europe.
Next, he published Journey to No End, followed by The Mighty Fallen (1958).
In 1967, he began writing non-fiction books for the New York publisher Ian Ballantine. Whiting continued this work even when producing novels.