Derek Robinson (novelist)

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Derek Robinson
Born (1932-04-12) 12 April 1932 (age 92)
Bristol
Pen name Dirk Robson
Occupation screenwriter, author, Rugby Union referee, broadcaster
Nationality British
Citizenship British
Education University
Alma mater Downing College, University of Cambridge
Period 1971–present
Genre fiction
Notable works Goshawk Squadron, Piece of Cake, The Eldorado Network, A Darker History of Bristol
A Load of Old Bristle: Krek Waiter's Peak Bristle, Run with the Ball
Website
www.derekrobinson.info

Derek Robinson (born 1932) is a British author best known for his military aviation novels full of black humour. He has also written several books on some of the more sordid events in the history of Bristol, his home town, as well as guides to rugby. He was nominated for the Booker Prize in 1971 for his first novel, Goshawk Squadron.[1]

After attending Cotham Grammar School,[2] Robinson served in the Royal Air Force as a fighter plotter, during his National Service. He has a History degree from Cambridge University, where he attended Downing College,[3] has worked in advertising in the UK and the US and as a broadcaster on radio and television. He was a qualified rugby referee for over thirty years and is a life member of Bristol Society of Rugby Referees.[4] He was married in 1964.[5]

Following his research of historical records for his novel Piece of Cake (1983) Robinson became convinced that it was the supremacy of the Royal Navy in the UK's coastal waters that caused Adolf Hitler to postpone invasion plans and not the Battle of Britain, as commonly claimed by the Royal Air Force.[6]

Works

Aviation Novels

Novels set in squadrons of the Royal Flying Corps (later the Royal Air Force) during the First World War:

Novel set in the inter-war era:

Novels set in RAF squadrons during the Second World War:

Novel set in the Cold War:

  • Hullo Russia, Goodbye England (2008). It begins in 1943, as Silk (the main protagonist from Damned Good Show) is on his second tour, and moves into the early 1960s when he rejoins the RAF as an Avro Vulcan pilot during the Cuban Missile Crisis. This novel was originally self-published and only available from Robinson's own website but a paperback edition was published by MacLehose Press in 2012.

All eight of Robinson's aviation novels were released in paperback editions by MacLehose Press in 2012–2013.

Luis Cabrillo Novels

Novels featuring Luis Cabrillo:

  • The Eldorado Network (1979), about counter-espionage in WWII Spain and Portugal.
  • Artillery of Lies (1991), set mostly in England and Germany.
  • Red Rag Blues (2006), about espionage and the McCarthy witchhunts in 1950s America.[7]
  • Operation Bamboozle (2009), Luis Cabrillo travels to Los Angeles and tangles with the Mob. Self-published and available from his website.

Other Books

  • Son of Bristle (1971) Abson Books. A guide to Bristle azit's poke.
  • Rotten with Honour (1973), about Cold War-espionage.
  • Kramer's War (1977) is set on the island of Jersey in 1944.
  • Run with the Ball (1984). Collins. Guide to Rugby Union play.
  • The Best Green Walks in Bristol (1994). Westcountry Books. Local walking guide.
  • A Load of Old Bristle: Krek Waiter's Peak Bristle (2002). Robinson, Derek, and Wiltshire, Vic. Countryside Books. More infermasun on howter's peak Bristle.
  • Kentucky Blues(2002), about life in a nineteenth-century American town.[8]
  • Sick Sentries of Bristle (2004). Countryside Books. "A slapstick dash through 600 years of local excitements".
  • Invasion, 1940 (2005), a non-fiction work about World War II which aims to debunk "two powerful myths": first, that the RAF alone prevented an invasion of Great Britain by Hitler's Germany; and second, that such an invasion force would inevitably have conquered Britain.
  • A Darker History of Bristol (2005). Countryside Books. "A fair share of cruel, inglorious and scandalous episodes that are generally little referred to".
  • Rugby: A Player's Guide to the Laws (2005). HarperCollinsWillow. The laws of the game made simple.
  • Better Rugby Refereeing (2007), co-authored with Ed Morrison.[9]

Notes

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External links