Manning Coles
Encyclopedia
Manning Coles is the pseudonym of two British
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

 writers, Adelaide Frances Oke Manning (1891-1959) and Cyril Henry Coles (1899-1965), who wrote many spy thrillers from the early 40s through the early 60s. The fictional protagonist in 26 of their books was Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon
Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon
Thomas Elphinstone Hambledon is the fictional protagonist of many spy novels written by the British author "Manning Coles" from 1940 through 1963...

, who works for the Foreign Office.

Biography

Manning and Coles were neighbors in East Meon
East Meon
East Meon is a village and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England. It is west of Petersfield.The nearest railway station is east of the village, at Petersfield....

, Hampshire
Hampshire
Hampshire is a county on the southern coast of England in the United Kingdom. The county town of Hampshire is Winchester, a historic cathedral city that was once the capital of England. Hampshire is notable for housing the original birthplaces of the Royal Navy, British Army, and Royal Air Force...

. Coles worked for British Intelligence in both the World Wars. Manning worked for the War Office
War Office
The War Office was a department of the British Government, responsible for the administration of the British Army between the 17th century and 1964, when its functions were transferred to the Ministry of Defence...

 during World War I. Their first books were fairly realistic and with a touch of grimness; their postwar books perhaps suffered from an excess of lightheartedness and whimsy. They also wrote a number of humorous novels about modern-day ghost
Ghost
In traditional belief and fiction, a ghost is the soul or spirit of a deceased person or animal that can appear, in visible form or other manifestation, to the living. Descriptions of the apparition of ghosts vary widely from an invisible presence to translucent or barely visible wispy shapes, to...

s, some of them involving ghostly cousins named Charles and James Latimer. These novels were published in England under the pseudonym of Francis Gaite but released in the United States under the Manning Coles byline.

Many of the original exploits were based on the real-life experiences of Coles, who lied about his age and enlisted under an assumed name in a Hampshire regiment during World War I while still a teenager. He eventually became the youngest officer in British intelligence, often working behind German lines, due to his extraordinary ability to master languages.
Coles had 2 sons (Michael and Peter, who were identical twins and who are both still alive, living in the UK) and the Ghost stories were based on the tales he used to tell his young sons when he was 'back from his travels'.

Tommy Hambledon novels

  • Drink to Yesterday, 1940
  • Pray Silence, 1940 (American title: A Toast to Tomorrow)
  • They Tell No Tales, 1941
  • Without Lawful Authority, 1943
  • Green Hazard, 1945
  • The Fifth Man, 1946
  • Let the Tiger Die, 1947
  • A Brother for Hugh, 1947 (American title: With Intent to Deceive)
  • Among Those Absent, 1948
  • Diamonds to Amsterdam, 1949
  • Not Negotiable, 1949
  • Dangerous by Nature, 1950
  • Now or Never, 1951
  • Alias Uncle Hugo, 1952 (British title: Operation Manhunt, 1953)
  • Night Train to Paris, 1952
  • A Knife for the Juggler, 1953 (revised American edition, 1964; also published as The Vengeance Man, 1967)
  • Not for Export, 1954 (American title: All That Glitters; also published as The Mystery of the Stolen Plans, 1960)
  • The Man in the Green Hat, 1955
  • The Basle Express, 1956
  • Birdwatcher's Quarry, 1956 (British title: The Three Beans, 1957)
  • Death of an Ambassador, 1957
  • No Entry, 1958
  • Crime in Concrete, 1960 (American title: Concrete Crime)
  • Search for a Sultan, 1961 (by Coles and Tom Hammerton)
  • The House at Pluck's Gutter, 1963 (by Coles and Tom Hammerton)

Novels without Tommy Hambledon

  • Half-Valdez, 1939 (by Manning alone)
  • This Fortress, 1942

Ghost novels under the Francis Gaite byline

  • Great Caesar's Ghost (juvenile), 1943 (British title: The Emperor's Bracelet, 1947)(non-ghost; a "lost city" story)
  • Brief Candles (The Latimers), 1954
  • Happy Returns (The Latimers), 1955 (British title: A Family Matter, 1956)
  • The Far Traveler, 1956
  • Come and Go (The Latimers), 1958
  • Duty Free, 1959 (non-ghost novel)

Uncollected short story

"Death Keeps a Secret", 1960 (in The Mystery Bedside Book, edited by John Creasey
John Creasey
John Creasey MBE was an English crime and science fiction writer. The author of more than 600 novels, he published them using 28 different pseudonyms, including Anthony Morton, Michael Halliday, Kyle Hunt, J.J. Marric, Jeremy York, Richard Martin, Peter Manton, Norman Deane, Gordon Ashe, Henry St...

)
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