L. A. Lewis (b. Sheffield, England,
6 February 1899; d. Southall,
England, 28
October 1961)

Leslie grew up at the Allin family estate at East Hendred in
Berkshire, and was educated at Roysse’s School in Abingdon (now named Abingdon School).
As a boy he wrote and illustrated a series of stories about a panther
named Blackie. During World War I he joined the Artist’s Rifles, and trained as
a pilot, taking his certificate on the Maurice Farman Biplane at the Military School in Ruislip, on 29 May 1917.
According to Richard Dalby, he served in France for a year, and after the
war he took a course in Aero Engineering, and later earned an Instructor’s
license.

Elizabeth Yeardye Rickell (1897-1988), who had served in
Queen Mary’s Army Auxiliary Crops during World War I, was Leslie’s longtime
friend, and she apparently became his common law wife in the early 1950s (there
is no official record of their marriage).
She told Richard Dalby that her husband destroyed his surviving writings
in a fit of depression, and that he long suffered from hallucinations, and from deteriorating
physical and mental health during his final years. He died of a heart attack
while in hospital in 1961. Tales of the Grotesque has been
reprinted three times, expanded by the one uncollected tale, in hardcover by
Ghost Story Press in 1994 and 2003, and in trade paperback by Shadow Publishing
in 2014, each reprint having an introduction by Richard Dalby.
Just noticed that Lesser- Known Writers has started back up again -- hurrah!
ReplyDeleteGreat !
ReplyDeleteIn the next post tell about the Dermot Chesson Spence please !