Alexander Fullerton
Encyclopedia
Alexander Fullerton is a British author of naval and other fiction. Born in 1924 in Suffolk and brought up in France, he was a cadet during the years 1938-1941 at the Royal Naval College
Royal Naval College
Royal Naval College may refer to:* Royal Naval Academy in Portsmouth , renamed the Royal Naval College in 1806* Royal Naval College, Greenwich * Royal Naval College, Osborne...

, Dartmouth
Dartmouth, Devon
Dartmouth is a town and civil parish in the English county of Devon. It is a tourist destination set on the banks of the estuary of the River Dart, which is a long narrow tidal ria that runs inland as far as Totnes...

 from the age of thirteen. He went to sea serving first in the battleship Queen Elizabeth
HMS Queen Elizabeth
HMS Queen Elizabeth could refer to one of three ships named in honour of Elizabeth I of England: was the lead ship of the Queen Elizabeth class of battleships, launched in 1913 and scrapped in 1948....

 in the Mediterranean, and spent the rest of the war at sea - mostly under it, in submarines.

Authorship

Alexander Fullerton's first novel - Surface!, based on his experiences as gunnery and torpedo officer of HM Submarine Seadog in the Far East, 1944–1945, in which capacity he was mentioned in despatches for distinguished service - was published in 1953. It became an immediate bestseller, with five reprints in six weeks, and sold over 500,000 copies. He has lived solely on his writing since 1967, and is claimed (by his publishers) to be one of the most borrowed authors from British libraries.

The Nicholas Everard Series

Alexander Fullerton's nine-volume Mariner of England series featuring his hero Nicholas Everard has secured his reputation as one of the finest of modern writers about naval warfare. As well as individual volumes, the series is also published in three omnibus volumes, each comprising three novels.
  • The Blooding of the Guns (1976)
  • Sixty Minutes for St George (1977)
  • Patrol to the Golden Horn (1978)
  • Storm Force to Narvik (1979)
  • Last Lift from Crete (1980)
  • All the Drowning Seas (1981)
  • A Share of Honour (1982)
  • The Torch Bearers (1983)
  • The Gatecrashers (1984)

The SBS Trilogy

  • Special Deliverance (1986)
  • Special Dynamic (1987)
  • Special Deception (1988)

The Rosie Ewing Quartet

A series of novels based on the activities of real-life wartime secret agent Rosie Ewing (real name Rosie Quarry) based on her adventures in German-occupied France.
  • Into the Fire (1995)
  • Return to the Field (1997)
  • In at the Kill (1999)
  • Single to Paris (2001)


When Rosie Quarry (a wartime secret agent) read Alexander Fullerton's four novels, she wrote to him suggesting that he might like to hear the story of her first mission, when she'd parachuted into moonlit countryside near Cahors and made her way down to Toulouse to join the SOE network as a radio-operator and courier. Rosie was twenty-four at the time, when the expected life-span of a radio-operator was six weeks. The result was contained in the following 'prequel' to the quartet, which also describes the meeting between her and Fullerton:
  • Staying Alive (2006)

Other Novels

  • Surface! (1953)
  • Bury the Past (1954)
  • Old Moke (1954)
  • No Man's Mistress (1955)
  • A Wren Called Smith (1957)
  • The White Men Sang (1958)
  • The Yellow Ford (1959)
  • The Waiting Game (1961)
  • Mantrap (1961)
  • Soldier from the Sea (1962)
  • The Thunder and the Flame (1964)
  • Lionheart (1965)
  • Chief Executive (1969)
  • The Publisher (1969)
  • Store (1971)
  • The Escapists (1972)
  • Other Mend's Wives (1973)
  • Piper's Leave (1974)
  • Regenesis (1983)
  • The Aphrodite Cargo (1985)
  • Look to the Wolves (1988)
  • Johnson's Bird (1989)
  • Bloody Sunset (1991)
  • Love for an Enemy (1993)
  • Not Thinking of Death (1994)
  • Band of Brothers (1996)
  • Final Dive (1998)
  • Wave Cry (1999)
  • The Floating Madhouse (2000)
  • Flight to Mons (2003)
  • Westbound, Warbound (2003)
  • Stark Realities (2004)
  • Non-Combatants (2005)
  • Submariner (2008)

Source

  • Alexander Fullerton, Nicholas Everard, Mariner of England: Volume 1. Little, Brown & Company, 2001. ISBN 0316-8588338.
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