Wilbur Smith remember the excitement of his new-found success: “In the following weeks the postman visited me regularly. He brought glad tidings of a sale of film rights in Hollywood, of a book society
choice, of acceptance by Viking Press in New York for an eye-rolling sum of dollars, of new publishers in Germany and France, of a paperback sale to Pan Books in England.” Publicity for the book was helped by a ban in South Africa, whose Publication Control Board described it as “offensive and harmful to public morals”.According
to report, Wilbur Smith was a bestselling author whose swashbuckling thrillers
set in Africa depicted the continent as a place of heroes, adventure and
romance.
Smith, who
has died aged 88, had written 49 novels, selling some 140 million copies during
his lifetime and had the fortune to see a number of them adapted for film and
television.
Wilbur
Smith was born in Kabwe, Zambia (then Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia) in 1933.
His parents, Efreda and Herbert Smith, ran a 25,000 acre cattle ranch. Aged 18
months he contracted malaria, leading to ten days of delirium fever and doubts
from doctors about whether he would live. “I survived and am now only mildly
crazy,” he later observed, “Which is good because you have to be at least
slightly crazy to write fiction for a living.”
He was
educated at Michaelhouse and Rhodes University, Grahamstown. Initially keen to
train as a journalist, he was persuaded by his father to take up accountancy.
However, the writing bug had already bitten him and on being paid £70 – twice
his monthly salary – for a story in Argosy magazine, he decided to try his hand
at penning a full-length novel.
But the
success he craved as a writer did not come immediately. His first manuscript,
The Gods First Make Mad, was repeatedly turned down, its only impact being to
generate what Smith described as an “impressive array of rejection letters from
leading publishers around the world”.
In 1964 he
struck lucky with his first published novel, When the Lion Feeds. The story
about the sons of a ranch owner, Waite Courtney, is set in Natal, and was based
on Smith’s own experiences of growing up in that world. His publisher,
Heinemann, put their confidence in him, offering a £2,000 advance and an
initial print run of 10,000 copies (later increased to 20,000). Charles Pick,
deputy managing editor at Heinemann, would go on to become Smith’s friend and
mentor.
When the
Lion Feeds established the formula upon which much of his subsequent output was
based. Of his 49 novels, more than half were centred in his home continent of
Africa and several of these continued the story of the Courtney family.
While his
first book did not make it to the screen, a number of Smith’s other books were
adapted for television and film. These included The Mercenaries (1968) – based
on The Dark of the Sun, and Gold – adapted as Gold Mine (1974), starring Roger
Moore and Suzannah York.
Interviewed
in 2013 for the Wall Street Journal, Smith responded to criticism that he had
created stories that did not fit with the modern world: “I’ve been accused of
violence and cruelty to animals and people. I’ve been accused of racism,
sacrilege. The views that I’m presenting are not my own. They are my
characters’.”
Outside of
his native Zambia, a series of novels set in Egypt had been inspired by his
story The Sunbird (1972), with a plot centred around an archaeological dig.
This became one of his favourite works, about he had once said “It was a
complex book, it gave me a great deal of pleasure.”
He had
returned to the theme of Egypt in his latest book, The New Kingdom, co-written
with Mark Chadbourn, published in September and the seventh of a series set in
the land of the pharaohs.
On the day
of his death, he had spent a morning reading and writing with his wife
Mokhiniso. He died unexpectedly that afternoon at his home in Cape Town.
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