Gordon Neil Stewart

Gordon Neil Stewart
Born (1912-06-25)25 June 1912
Melbourne, Australia
Died 15 February 1999(1999-02-15)
Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation Writer
Nationality Australian
Genre History, biography, fiction

Gordon Neil Stewart (25 June 1912 – 15 February 1999) was an Australian writer.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Stewart was born in Melbourne into a wealthy Australian family with pastoral interests in the Bathurst district of New South Wales. He was a great grandson of Major General William Stewart (1769–1854) Lieutenant Governor of New South Wales from 1825 to 1827.[7] Stewart received a spasmodic education at The Scots College, Sydney due to his parents' frequent travels, but developed a love of reading from long holidays spent in the library of his uncle's house (Abercrombie House) in Bathurst.[8] The family moved to Paris when Stewart was in his late teens. He attended an English language school and then studied art. With other members of his family now based in England, Stewart settled in London where he worked from time to time as a journalist and became involved in radical politics. He mixed in literary circles and met Pamela Hansford Johnson and Dylan Thomas. He is said to have been banished from the poetry circle of Victor Neuburg, a former associate of occultist Aleister Crowley, for making jokes about 'yogis and bogeys'.[9] In 1936 he married the novelist Pamela Hansford Johnson (1s 1941, 1d 1944) with whom he collaborated on two thrillers under the name Nap Lombard. When the Second World War broke out he joined the British army and served as an officer in the artillery in India and Burma. After his divorce from Pamela Hansford Johnson, Stewart married Doreen Ellen Coulling in 1950 (1d 1952). In 1953 he published The Cloak and Dollar War, the first book to be written about the Central Intelligence Agency, described by intelligence scholar Richard J Aldrich as a revelatory text.[10] Stewart returned to Australia in 1955 and worked in Sydney as a journalist for the mining and construction industry. He retired to Bathurst in 1983 where he died on 15 February 1999.

Bibliography

Fiction

Biography

History

Politics

Edited book

References

  1. Who's Who of Australian Writers. D. W. Thorpe 1995 2nd edition. 822 pages ISBN 1-875589-20-1, page 650.
  2. http://www.austlit.edu.au/run?ex=AgentIndex&s=S
  3. http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/3_3_1biographies.html
  4. http://www.australianhorror.com/index.php?view=141
  5. http://eidolon.net/steven_paulsen/pulse2.html
  6. http://125.7.47.25/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=WF51511844498.565279&profile=pack--1&uri=link=3100007~!4798~!3100001~!3100002&aspect=subtab56&menu=search&ri=1&source=~!horizon&term=Stewart%2C+Gordon+Neil%2C+1912-&index=
  7. http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A020446b.htm
  8. A Boy and his Reading 1917-1921. Gordon Neil Stewart Overland 125 (1991) pages 10-15
  9. The Magical Dilemma of Victor Neuburg. Jean Overton Fuller (W.H.Allen, 1965) page 271
  10. CIA History as a Cold War Battleground. The Forgotten First Wave of Agency Narratives by Richard J Aldrich, Chapter 1 of Intelligence Studies in Britain and the US: Historiography since 1945. Editors C J Moran and C J Murphy. (Edinburgh University Press, 2013). ISBN 9780748646272. Pages 23-25, 40.
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