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Ernest Elmore

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Occupation
  
novelist, actor

Genre
  
Crime fiction Fantasy


Name
  
Ernest Elmore

Role
  
Writer

Died
  
1957, Hastings, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Cornish Coast Mu, The Lake District Murder, The Sussex Downs M

Ernest Carpenter Elmore (1901–1957) was an English theatre producer and director, and writer of crime and fantasy novels. He wrote his crime novels under the pseudonym John Bude.

Contents

Life

Elmore was born in Maidstone, Kent in 1901. He attended Mill Hill School until 1919, where he was a boarder. He attended a secretarial college in Cheltenham before moving to Letchworth and becoming Games master at St Christopher School. While there he also assisted with the school's dramatic activities. His interest in dramatics led him to join the Lena Ashwell Players as stage manager, touring the country. Much of Elmore's early writing took place in dressing rooms during his spare time.

In 1931 he is known to have been living in the village of Loose, Kent before returning to Maidstone where he produced plays for the local dramatic society, where he met his future wife Betty. They married in 1933 and moved to Beckley, Sussex, where he became a full-time author. Together Elmore and his wife had a daughter, Jennifer and son Richard.

In December 2015, Elmore's photo appeared in The Times along with a lengthy article detailing the success of the reprints of his books.

Writings

Writing as John Bude, Elmore published thirty crime novels, with Inspector William Meredith appearing in most of them. The first two, both of which were published in 1935, were The Lake District Murder and The Cornish Coast Murder, followed the next year by The Sussex Downs Murder. These three have since been reprinted by the British Library. Elmore was a founder member of the Norfolk-based Crime Writers' Association in 1953.

Straddling the crime novels were several works of humorous fantasy written under his own name, the most well-known being: The Steel Grubs (1928), This Siren Song (1930) (which features some MacGuffins), and The Lumpton Gobbelings (1954) (about an invasion of naked little people who scandalize the local villagers). Including the children's book, Snuffly Snorty Dog (1946), Elmore wrote a total of seven books in his own name.

Fellow British crime author Martin Edwards commented: "Bude writes both readably and entertainingly. His work may not have been stunning enough to belong with the greats, but there is a smoothness and accomplishment about even his first mystery, The Cornish Coast Murder, which you don't find in many début mysteries."

Elmore died in Hastings, Sussex on 8 November 1957.

Adaptations

Audio book versions of The Lake District Murder, The South Downs Murder (originally The Sussex Downs Murder, 1936), and The Cornish Coast Murder were produced by Soundings Audio Books and narrated by Gordon Griffin.

References

Ernest Elmore Wikipedia


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