E. Phillips Oppenheim
Edward Phillips Oppenheim was an English novelist, a prolific writer of best-selling genre fiction, featuring glamorous characters, international intrigue and fast action. Notably easy to read, they were viewed as popular entertainments. He was featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1927.
Biography
Edward Phillips Oppenheim was born 22 October 1866 in Tottenham, London, the son of Henrietta Susannah Temperley Budd and Edward John Oppenheim, a leather merchant. After attending Wyggeston Grammar School until the sixth form in 1883, his family's finances forced him to withdraw and he worked in his father's business for almost twenty years. His father subsidized the publication of his first novel, which proved just successful enough to break even. He published five of his novels between 1908 and 1912 under the pseudonym "Anthony Partridge". Around 1900, Julien Stevens Ulman, a wealthy New York leather merchant who enjoyed Oppenheim's books, bought the leather works and made him a salaried director to support his writing career. He quickly found a successful formula and established his reputation. In 1913, John Buchan, launching his career as a suspense novelist, called Oppenheim "my master in fiction" and "the greatest Jewish writer since Isaiah". As early as that year, his publishers were bringing out new editions of some of his earlier works to meet, in the words of one trade publication, "the insatiable demand of the public for more stories by him". It added: "Readers of the author's recent books will find these first stories of life sketches full of interest, their very crudeness being positively amusing in light of his present finished craftsmanship."In 1892 Oppenheim married an American, Elise Clara Hopkins of Easthampton, Massachusetts. They lived in Evington, Leicestershire until the First World War and had one daughter. During that war he worked for the Ministry of Information.
He described his method in 1922: "I create one more or less interesting personality, try to think of some dramatic situation in which he or she might be placed, and use that as the opening of a nebulous chain of events." He never used an outline: "My characters would resent it." When he needed villains for his diplomatic and political intrigues he drew on Prussian militarists and anarchists, enough for one reviewer to lament "the baldness of his propaganda". For example, in A People's Man, a socialist discovers that his movement is secretly run by German spies.
A 1927 review in the New York Times said he "numbers his admirers in the hundreds of thousands and has one or more of his books on a prominent shelf in almost every home one enters". He appeared on the cover of Time magazine on 12 September 1927.
Reviews for his work treated them as entertainments with only a slight relationship to the mystery genre. In 1933, a review of Crooks in the Sunshine explained that "Mr. Oppenheim's crooks are so polished that they have no difficulty in moving in the very best society.... There is very little mystery in this book, but there is dress-suit crime galore." In 1936, a review of A Magnificent Hoax, his one hundredth novel, said: "The hoax is on the reader, who is led, through nearly 300 pages, only to find that nothing very terrible has happened. The explanation takes a bit of believing, but since it extricates several very nice people from what looks like a nasty mess, one is willing to let that pass." The Shy Plutocrat, published early in World War II, was "a good tale to take your mind off your worries". Readers came to expect familiar themes, "the peculiar Oppenheim blend of dispatch-box atmosphere, femmes fatales, double traitors, and a tight plot". In mid-career, The Great Impersonation was called "his best work".
Along with dozens of novel and short story collections, he produced an autobiography, The Pool of Memory in 1942.
Oppenheim's literary success enabled him to buy a villa on the French riviera and a yacht, then a house in Guernsey, though he lost access to this during the Second World War. He regained the house, le Vanquiedor in St. Peter Port, after the war and died there on 3 February 1946. His wife died there on 25 November.
An assessment that appeared in the New York Times upon his death said: "As he recalls in his pleasant and modest autobiography, all his books were easy to write. They were equally easy to read, especially on a summer vacation, when escapist literature is most welcome." He composed by dictating to a secretary and once produced seven works in a single year. His social set included the characters that populated his novels, where he created "a glamorous world of international intrigue, romance and plushy society galloping along in swift action and suspense". One academic study calls him "a talented entertainer".
Writings
Novels
Oppenheim produced more than 100 novels between 1887 and 1943. They include:- Expiation
- Curate and Fiend
- A Lawyer's Romance
- A Monk of Cruta
- The Tragedy of a Week
- The Peer and the Woman
- A Daughter of the Marionis
- False Evidence
- The Modern Prometheus
- The Mystery of Mr. Bernard Brown
- The Wooing of Fortune
- The Postmaster of Market Deignton
- The Amazing Judgment
- Mysterious Mr. Sabin
- A Daughter of Astrea
- As a Man Lives
- Mr. Marx's Secret
- The Man and His Kingdom
- One Little Thread of Life
- The World's Great Snare
- A Millionaire of Yesterday
- The Survivor
- Enoch Strone
- A Sleeping Memory
- The Traitors
- A Prince of Sinners
- The Yellow Crayon
- The Betrayal
- Anna the Adventuress
- A Maker of History
- The Master Mummer
- A Lost Leader
- The Tragedy of Adrea
- The Malefactor
- Berenice
- The Avenger
- The Great Secret
- The Governor
- The Distributors
- The Missioner
- The Kingdom of Earth
- Jeanne of the Marshes
- The Illustrious Prince
- Passers-By
- The Lost Ambassador
- The Golden Web
- The Moving Finger
- Havoc
- The Court of St. Simon
- The Lighted Way
- The Tempting of Tavernake
- The Mischief Maker
- The Double Life of Mr. Alfred Burton
- The Way of These Women
- A People's Man
- The Vanished Messenger
- The Black Box
- The Double Traitor
- Mr. Grex of Monte Carlo
- The Kingdom of the Blind
- The Hillman
- The Cinema Murder
- The Pawns Count
- The Zeppelin's Passenger
- The Wicked Marquis
- The Box with Broken Seals
- The Curious Quest
- The Great Impersonation
- The Devil's Paw
- The Profiteers
- Jacob's Ladder
- Nobody's Man
- The Evil Shepherd
- The Great Prince Shan
- The Mystery Road
- The Wrath to Come
- The Passionate Quest
- Stolen Idols
- Gabriel Samara, Peacemaker
- The Golden Beast
- Prodigals of Monte Carlo
- Harvey Garrard's Crime
- The Interloper
- Miss Brown of X. Y. O.
- The Light Beyond
- The Fortunate Wayfarer
- Matorni's Vineyard
- The Treasure House of Martin Hews
- The Glenlitten Murder
- The Million Pound Deposit
- The Lion and the Lamb
- Up the Ladder of Gold
- Simple Peter Cradd
- The Man from Sing Sing
- The Ostrekoff Jewels
- Murder at Monte Carlo
- Jeremiah and the Princess
- The Gallows of Chance
- The Man without Nerves
- The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent
- The Spy Paramount
- The Battle of Basinghall Street
- Floating Peril
- The Magnificent Hoax
- The Dumb Gods Speak
- Envoy Extraordinary
- The Mayor on Horseback
- The Colossus of Arcadia
- The Spymaster
- And Still I Cheat the Gallows
- Sir Adam Disappeared
- Exit a Dictator
- The Strangers' Gate
- Last Train Out
- The Shy Plutocrat
- Mr. Mirakel
Short story collections
- The Long Arm of Mannister
- Peter Ruff and the Double-Four
- For the Queen
- Those Other Days
- Mr. Laxworthy's Adventures
- The Amazing Partnership
- The Game of Liberty
- Mysteries of the Riviera
- Aaron Rodd, Diviner
- Ambrose Lavendale, Diplomat
- Hon. Algernon Knox, Detective
- The Seven Conundrums
- Michael's Evil Deeds
- The Inevitable Millionaires
- The Terrible Hobby of Sir Joseph Londe
- The Adventures of Mr. Joseph P. Gray
- The Little Gentleman from Okehampstead
- The Channay Syndicate
- Mr. Billingham, the Marquis and Madelon
- Madame and Her Twelve Virgins
- Nicholas Goade, Detective
- The Exploits of Pudgy Pete
- Chronicles of Melhampton
- The Human Chase
- Jennerton & Co.
- What Happened to Forester
- Slane's Long Shots
- Gangster's Glory
- Sinners Beware
- Crooks in the Sunshine
- The Ex-Detective
- General Besserley's Puzzle Box
- Advice Limited
- Ask Miss Mott
- Curious Happenings to the Rooke Legatees
- A Pulpit in the Grill Room
- General Besserley's Second Puzzle Box
- The Grassleyes Mystery
Film adaptations
- The Black Box
- Mr Grex of Monte Carlo
- The Master Mummer
- The Game of Liberty, also released as Under Suspicion
- The World's Great Snare
- Master of Men
- The Hillman, filmed as In the Balance ; The Hillman
- The Court of St. Simon, filmed as The Silent Master
- The Great Awakening, filmed under its American title A Sleeping Memory
- Mr Wingrave, Millionaire, filmed as The Test of Honor
- The Double Life of Mr. Alfred Burton
- The Illustrious Prince
- The Long Arm, filmed under its American title The Long Arm of Mannister
- The Other Romilly, filmed under its American title The Cinema Murder
- The Plunderers, filmed under its American title The Golden Web ; and again as The Golden Web
- The Mystery of Mr. Bernard Brown
- The Mystery Road
- Jeanne of the Marshes, filmed as Behind Masks
- The Great Impersonation, filmed three times: as a 1921 silent film, then again in 1935 and in 1942
- A Lost Leader
- The Missioner
- Expiation
- False Evidence
- The Great Prince Shan
- The Ex-Duke, filmed as Prince of Tempters
- The Inevitable Millionaires, filmed as Millionaires
- The Passionate Quest
- The Temptation of Tavernake, filmed as Sisters of Eve
- The Lion and the Lamb
- The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent, filmed as Strange Boarders
- The Amazing Quest of Mr Ernest Bliss, also filmed as The Amazing Quest of Ernest Bliss