David Gemmell

Author

Birthday August 1, 1948

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace London, United Kingdom

DEATH DATE 2006-7-28, Hastings, UK (57 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#52470 Most Popular

1948

David Andrew Gemmell (1 August 1948 – 28 July 2006) was a British author of heroic fantasy, best known for his debut novel, Legend.

David Gemmell was born in 1948 in west London.

Raised alone by his mother until the age of 6, he experienced a harsh upbringing in a tough urban area, suffering bullying and taunts from his peers, partly due to the absence of his father, and often sustained serious injuries through fighting.

Preferring reading books to fighting, he was compelled to take up boxing by his stepfather, who insisted he learn how to stand up for himself without "hiding behind walls or running away"; this philosophy informed much of Gemmell's later writing.

As a child, he said he "would have given anything" to stand beside King Harold II at the Battle of Hastings.

As a teenager, he wanted to stand with Marshal Will Kane in the film High Noon.

Gemmell was expelled from school at the age of 16, for organizing a gambling syndicate, and as a youth was arrested several times.

He claimed that one psychologist's report at the time labelled him a psychopath.

Gemmell went on to work as a labourer, a lorry-driver's mate, and a nightclub bouncer before his mother set up a job interview with a local newspaper.

Of 100 applicants, he was probably the least qualified for the position but was hired owing to his display of arrogance during the interview, which was mistaken for self-confidence.

He went on to work as a journalist for several local newspapers in East Sussex, for five of which he eventually became editor-in-chief.

He also worked freelance as a stringer for the Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, and Daily Express national newspapers.

1960

Coming from a staunch socialist family, Gemmell carried banners and campaigned for eventual Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson in the 1960s, although he nevertheless admitted a grudging alignment with Thatcherite policies on issues of foreign policy, especially the Falklands Conflict, and with Reaganite views on East-West relations.

1970

Gemmell first attempted writing a novel in the 1970s, but The Man from Miami failed to find a publisher.

He later admitted that the book "was so bad it could curdle milk at 50 paces."

1976

In 1976, after being diagnosed with a cancer he believed to be terminal, he wrote The Siege of Dros Delnoch in order to take his mind off his illness and to realise his ambition of having a novel published before he died.

Written in two weeks, the novel told of a siege resisted against overwhelming odds, at the time serving as a metaphor for his illness; the fortress at the center of the tale was Gemmell, the invaders were his cancer.

Leaving the ending of the novel open, he planned to let the fortress stand or fall dependent upon his own prognosis.

1980

When Gemmell later learned that he had suffered a misdiagnosis, he set The Siege of Dros Delnoch to one side until 1980, when a friend read the manuscript and convinced Gemmell to sharpen up the novel in order to make one last attempt at publication.

1982

It was accepted in 1982 and published in 1984 under the new title, Legend, going on to achieve considerable commercial success.

Gemmell said that while it had "all the flaws you expect in a first novel", the writing of Legend was "a golden time" in his life, citing it as the favourite of all his novels.

He said that while he could "write it better" after becoming an established author, "[its heart] wouldn't be bettered by improving its style."

1984

A former journalist and newspaper editor, Gemmell had his first work of fiction published in 1984.

He went on to write over thirty novels.

Gemmell's works display violence, yet also explore themes of honour, loyalty and redemption.

There is always a strong heroic theme but nearly always the heroes are flawed in some way.

With over one million copies sold, his work continues to sell worldwide.

1986

Gemmell's journalism career overlapped with his career writing novels until the publication of his third novel Waylander in 1986, when he was fired after using colleagues' names for characters in the book.

Gemmell later said that his Managing Director had regarded it "a poisonous attack on his integrity."

After the publication of Waylander, Gemmell became an author full-time, writing over thirty novels in total, some as part of long-running series, others as standalone works.

Most of his novels were in the heroic fantasy genre; White Knight, Black Swan was a crime thriller, appearing under the pseudonym Ross Harding, and was Gemmell's only novel not to become a bestseller.

Two of Gemmell's novels have also been adapted into graphic novel format.

Gemmell's books have sold more than one million copies.

Gemmell married twice; his first marriage to Valerie produced two children before he met his second wife, Stella who had already been acknowledged in many of his books.

The couple made their home in Hastings on the south-east coast of England until the author's death.

2006

In mid-2006, Gemmell was on a trip to Alaska when he became discomforted.

He immediately travelled back to the UK, where he underwent quadruple heart bypass surgery in a private London hospital.

Within two days he was able to take physical exercise and returned home to resume work on his latest novel.

2009

The David Gemmell Awards for Fantasy were awarded from 2009 to 2018, with a stated goal to "restore fantasy to its proper place in the literary pantheon".

A steering group of 18 authors was chaired by writer Stan Nicholls and the award was decided by a public vote.