- Born
- Died
- Birth nameJohn Robert Stuart Pringle
- Gerald Verner was born Robert Stuart Pringle in Streatham, London, England, on June 26,1897. He was a prolific writer of thrillers and wrote more than 120 novels translated into over 35 languages. Among his successful stage plays were adaptations of Peter Cheyney's "The Urgent Hangman" into "Meet Mr.Callaghan" (1952) and the Agatha Christie thriller "Towards Zero" (1956). Many of his books were adapted into radio serials, stage plays and films. In the 1930s he wrote for the magazines "The Thriller" and "Detective Weekly". With changed titles and the protagonists, many of these stories were recycled as novels for publisher Wright & Brown. His style was heavily influenced by that of Edgar Wallace. The Duke of Windsor was an avid fan of Verner's thrillers and was presented with a special edition of 15 of them bound in blue. He died of natural causes at Broadstairs, Kent, England on September 16, 1980.
In his early days Verner used to write as Donald Stuart, and his output included 44 stories for the Sexton Blake Library. He also wrote 6 stories for Union Jack and 3 for the The Thriller. He also wrote two plays, "Sexton Blake" and "The Shadow", as well as two films, The Man Outside (1933) and The Shadow (1933). He died of natural causes at Broadstairs, Kent, England, on September 16, 1980. His son, Christopher Verner, has supervised many special effects projects for films and TV commercials.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Christopher Verner (qv's & corrections by A. Nonymous)
- Children
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content