SHOTS Magazine reports:
It is with deep sadness that Shots reports the death of Roy Peter Martin, better known to crime fiction fans as James Melville and Hampton Charles, who passed on 23rd March, aged 83, only weeks before his most famous crime series, the novel featuring Japanese policeman Superintendent Otani, was to be brought back into print by Ostara Crime, after a gap of more than thirty years.
Roy Peter Martin was born in London in 1931. He read philosophy at Birkbeck College and after National Service in the RAF worked in local government and then entered teaching. In 1960 he became a British Council Officer and thereafter his career was in cultural diplomacy and educational development in Indonesia, Japan and Hungary. In 1979 he returned to Japan as Head of the British Council and began to write the Superintendent Otani series of crime novels which “provided a vivid and multi-stranded portrait of Japanese society, caught between its traditional (and often hidebound) past and the exigencies of modern life”. He also wrote historical novels set in Japan and spy novels which drew on his experiences in Indonesia and Hungary.
Under the pen name Hampton Charles, he continued
the ‘Miss Seeton’ series of stories (gentle parodies of Agatha Christie’s Miss
Marple books) originally written by Heron
Ostara Publishing are to release new Ostara Crime editions of James Melville’s first three ‘Otani’ novels: The Wages of Zen, The Chrysanthemum Chain and A Sort of Samurai. Further details on: www.ostarapublishing.co.uk.
Read the Obit in The Guardian by his sons James and Adam Martin.
2 comments:
Oh such sad news! I loved his Otani series.
me too.
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