| Lionel Davidson |
Lionel Davidson obituary
Award-winning writer renowned for thrillers such as The Rose of Tibet and The Chelsea Murders
Dennis Barker
Monday 2 November 2009
Graham Greene called Lionel Davidson, who has died aged 87, the first contemporary storyteller to have recaptured the high adventure of Rider Haggard, while Rebecca West once said he was a young Kipling. This was not hyperbole for, as a novelist, Davidson chose the international thriller form, without being submerged by it. He was happy to acknowledge that his "thrillers" had few overt thrills.
In one of his later books, Kolymsky Heights (1994), Davidson had Dr Johnny Porter, a part-Gitxsan anthropologist-cum-CIA agent from British Columbia, infiltrated into an isolated Soviet scientific station in the Arctic, from which – because research into the discovery of a frozen, primitive man, several thousand years old, was so sensitive – no scientist was ever allowed to return.