Douglas Rutherford Explained

Douglas Rutherford
Birth Name:James Douglas Rutherford McConnell
Pseudonym:Douglas Rutherford
Birth Date:14 October 1915
Death Place:Monxton near Andover, Hampshire
Years Active:1950–1987
Language:English
Genre:Detective novels

James Douglas Rutherford McConnell (14 October 1915 – 29 April 1988) who used the pen-name Douglas Rutherford was a language teacher and an author.

Biography

Born in Kilkenny, Ireland 14 October 1915. He went to school in Yorkshire, studied at Clare College, Cambridge, graduating in 1937, and received his MA from the University of Reading. During the Second World War, he served in the British Army Intelligence Corps in North Africa and Italy. After demobilisation, he became a modern languages teacher at Eton College from 1946 until his retirement in 1973.[1]

Writing on weekends and holidays, he published his first novel, Comes the Blind Fury, in 1950. Many of his works centered on race-tracks or sports cars. With Francis Durbridge, he co-authored two novels in the Paul Temple series: The Tyler Mystery in 1957 and East of Algiers in 1959. Under the name James McConnell, he published books on learning foreign languages and on Eton.

He joined the Detection Club in 1970.

He married, in 1939, Margaret Worsley 'Peggy' Gandy (1910–1952) - daughter of Surg.-Cdr. Eric Worsley Gandy OBE; and secondly in 1953, Laura Margaret Goodwin (1922–2001).

He died on in Monxton, Hampshire.

Works

Novels

Series: Paddy Regan

Series: Paul Temple (with Francis Durbridge)

Other novels

Short story

Non-fiction Books

Written as James McConnell or J. D. R. McConnell

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Douglas Rutherford (1914-1988). Books and Writers. 11 February 2016.