Connington, J.J.
- Country/Region:
- United Kingdom
- Genres:
- Miscellaneous prose, Crime literature, Science fiction
The Scottish writer A. (Alfred) W. (Walter) Stewart had two successful but entirely different careers. Under his own name, he was a well-known chemist, the author of respected specialist works and textbooks and a lecturer in the subject at several British universities: 1919-44 as a professor at Queen’s University in Belfast. Under the pseudonym J.J. Connington, he wrote a famous science-fiction novel and a whole row of crime novels, some of which are regarded as classics. He was a member of the Detection Club, and his stories have been praised by writers such as John Dickson Carr, T.S. Eliot and Dorothy L. Sayers: the latter openly admitted that she had been inspired by Connington’s books with regard to certain elements in her novel The Five Red Herrings (1931).
This is an abbreviated version of the article about Connington, J.J.. Please log in to get the full view of Alex Crimewriters.
This feature requires a subscription
This feature requires a subscription
This feature requires a subscription
This feature requires a subscription
This feature requires a subscription