Christopher Wood (writer)
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Christopher Hovelle Wood (5 November 1935 – 9 May 2015) was an English screenwriter and novelist, best known for the ''Confessions'' series of novels and films which he wrote as Timothy Lea. Under his own name, he adapted two
James Bond The ''James Bond'' franchise focuses on James Bond (literary character), the titular character, a fictional Secret Intelligence Service, British Secret Service agent created in 1953 by writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels ...
novels for the screen: '' The Spy Who Loved Me'' (1977, with Richard Maibaum) and '' Moonraker'' (1979). Wood's many novels divide into four groups: semi-autobiographical literary fiction, historical fiction, adventure novels, and pseudonymous humorous erotica.


Life and career


Family

Christopher Wood was born in the London borough of Lambeth, son of Walter Leonard Wood and Audrey Maud, née Hovell. Wood had three children, one of whom is film producer and literary agent Caroline Wood. Wood died at his apartment in southwest France on 9 May 2015, and was survived by his son and daughter. His death was not widely known until Sir Roger Moore paid tribute to him later that year on
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on 17 October.


Education, military experience and writing career

Wood's parents sent their son to board at Edward VI Grammar School in Norwich to protect him from The Blitz. The Baedeker Blitz of April 1942 saw the adjacent medieval school bombed into rubble. Wood continued his education at King's College Junior School in London where he found himself at risk from "drunken, mentally disturbed, sexual predators" among the staff. Wood graduated from Peterhouse at
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in 1960"Christopher (Hovelle) Wood." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2001. Literature Resource Center. with degrees in economics and law. He did his mandatory military service in
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, which inspired his second novel ''Terrible Hard, Says Alice''. Novelist and fellow future Bond writer William Boyd praised the book, citing it as one of the few convincing examples of accounts of war alongside
Ernest Hemingway Ernest Miller Hemingway ( ; July 21, 1899 – July 2, 1961) was an American novelist, short-story writer and journalist. Known for an economical, understated style that influenced later 20th-century writers, he has been romanticized fo ...
's '' A Farewell to Arms'' and Joseph Heller's '' Catch-22''. Wood's African experiences inspired two novels: his first, ''Make it Happen to Me'' and his adventure novel ''A Dove Against Death'' (1983). Of ''A Dove Against Death'', he recalled, "I was helping to conduct a plebiscite in the Southern Cameroons under UN supervision in 1960. An old man came out of a hut wearing what at first glance I thought was a brass coal scuttle. Then I realized that it was German helmet with a spike on it. My interest began then. Many years later came the story." After considerable research, Wood discovered records of a Dove that was sent to south-west Africa and a wireless station in Togoland that the Germans built and the British destroyed, all of which he wove together to create the novel. Wood became an account executive at the advertising agency Masius Wynne-Williams where he managed national brands. Like his Masius colleague Desmond Skirrow, Wood used the daily train commutes between his Royston home and London to write his first several books. After unsuccessful attempts submitting scripts for television, Wood wrote his first novel which he entitled ''Nobody Here But Us Pickens''. The publishers retitled it ''Make it Happen to Me''. Sales were poor and the book was subsequently withdrawn after a threatened defamation lawsuit. Wood pitched the idea of a series of erotic comic novels to his publishers at Sphere paperbacks. The first of these books, '' Confessions of a Window Cleaner'', went through multiple editions. With the success of the ''Confessions'' books, Wood quit his job at Masius – despite his father's stringent objections – to write full-time. Wood and his family subsequently moved to France. Wood intended to continue writing literary fiction, but found the demands on his time too great. He reluctantly decided that "serious writing" would have to wait while the ''Confessions'' books were selling. Among projects that were put aside include a tell-all novel about the advertising world. Critic Richard Newman in ''Books and Bookmen'' considered this dichotomy in his review of Wood's historical novel ''John Adam – Samurai''. "I just can't make up my mind about ''John Adam – Samurai'' – or, for that matter, its author, Christopher Wood. As a piece of sheer escapism, it's fantastic: it's got just the right amount of tongue-in-cheek cheekiness. My problem is — did he write it as a piece of cerebral fantasy to escape from the frustration of weekdays spent in a London advertising agency (in which case, bully for him); or does he want to be taken as a 'serious' author. To me, however, it's as if all the fantasies of this London advertising man ..had, at the advanced age of 36, broken out into a cold sweat. Psychiatrists tell us we should shed our fantasies by the time we reach our mid-thirties, so perhaps Christopher Wood is doing just that. And yet, underlying it all, one feels that he has done his homework and knows his Samurai very well. And he really makes you think you are watching it all. Qualities like this are worth developing. His is the imagination which could come up with something really good."


''Confessions'', and other pseudonymous works

Wood was also responsible for the ''Confessions'' series of novels and their film adaptations, written under the pseudonym Timothy Lea. They are ''Confessions of a Window Cleaner'', '' Confessions of a Driving Instructor'', '' Confessions from a Holiday Camp'', ''Confessions from a Hotel'', ''Confessions of a Travelling Salesman'', ''Confessions of a Film Extra'', ''Confessions from the Clink'', ''Confessions of a Private Soldier'', ''Confessions from the Pop Scene'' (adapted into the movie '' Confessions of a Pop Performer''), ''Confessions from a Health Farm'', ''Confessions from the Shop Floor'', ''Confessions of a Long Distance Lorry Driver'', ''Confessions of a Plumber's Mate'', ''Confessions of a Private Dick'', ''Confessions from a Luxury Liner'', ''Confessions from a Nudist Colony'', ''Confessions of a Milkman'', ''Confessions of an Ice Cream Man'' and ''Confessions from a Haunted House''. Wood told an interviewer for ''
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'' in 2013: "The books, and later the films, got terrible reviews, but they were successful, and success was its own currency". Wood told '' Penthouse'' that each ''Confessions'' book took approximately five weeks to complete. "They were funny then, and they are funny now", Wood asserted in 2013. "Then again, I always did like smut." Sphere Books published the first eight ''Confessions'' books. After Wood switched publishers, jumping to Futura Books, Sphere commissioned Laurence James to write twelve further ''Confessions'' books under the name "Jonathan May". Wood also created a female counterpart, Rosie Dixon, and these were likewise written in the first person perspective and published pseudonymously under the name "Rosie Dixon". Although nine Rosie Dixon novels were published, only the first—''Confessions of a Night Nurse''—was made into a film, '' Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse'' (1978). The other titles were ''Confessions of a Gym Mistress'', ''Confessions from an Escort Agency'', ''Confessions of a Lady Courier'', ''Confessions from a Package Tour'', ''Confessions of a Physical WRAC'', ''Confessions of a Baby Sitter'', ''Confessions of a Personal Secretary'', and ''Rosie Dixon, Barmaid''. This was his second series to feature a female protagonist as he started the Penny Sutton books a year previously with ''The Stewardesses''. The other books in the series were ''The Stewardesses Down Under'', ''The Jumbo Jet Girls'', ''I'm Penny, Fly Me'' and ''Penny Sutton, Supersonic''. Wood also wrote three pseudonymous books featuring the teenager Oliver Grape: ''Onwards Virgins'' (later reissued as ''Forward Virgins''), '' Crumpet Voluntary'' and ''It's a Knock Up''. As Frank Clegg, Wood also wrote ''Soccer Thug'' featuring Harold "Striker" Rickards, football hooligan.


James Bond

Wood was the first author to write novelisations of Bond films. His novelisation of '' The Spy Who Loved Me'', renamed '' James Bond, the Spy Who Loved Me'' to avoid confusion with Ian Fleming's original novel, has nothing in common with the Fleming book. Similarly, the plot of the novelisation of '' Moonraker'', renamed '' James Bond and Moonraker'', is almost entirely written by Wood, although it does share some similarities with Fleming's original novel, in particular the villain Hugo Drax. Bond fans generally rate Wood's novelisations highly.
Kingsley Amis Sir Kingsley William Amis (16 April 1922 – 22 October 1995) was an English novelist, poet, critic and teacher. He wrote more than 20 novels, six volumes of poetry, a memoir, short stories, radio and television scripts, and works of social crit ...
wrote in the '' New Statesman'' that, despite several reservations, "Mr Wood has bravely tackled his formidable task, that of turning a typical late Bond film, which must be basically facetious, into a novel after Ian Fleming, which must be basically serious. ... the descriptions are adequate and the action writing excellent."Amis, Kingsley. ''James Bond, the Spy Who Loved Me.'' New Statesman 1 July 1977: p.25.


Film work

In 1979 LWT screened his 13-part situation comedy ''Lovely Couple'', produced and directed by Derrick Goodwin. He also wrote the
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'' Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins'' (1985) starring Fred Ward, which was directed by former Bond director Guy Hamilton. In the late 1990s Wood wrote scripts for producer Roger Corman. Wood's novel ''California, Here I Am'' (2004) is another semi-autobiographical work, this time set in the American film industry. William Boyd said the novel is "A very funny, shrewd and horribly accurate novel about the movie business, Hollywood-style, written with sustained brio and mordant intelligence."


Bibliography


Miscellany

* *"Introduction", for 2013
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reissues of the Timothy Lea and Rosie Dixon ''Confessions'' books


Screenplays

*'' Confessions of a Window Cleaner'' (1974) *'' Confessions of a Pop Performer'' (1975) *'' Seven Nights in Japan'' (1976) *'' Confessions of a Driving Instructor'' (1976) *'' Confessions from a Holiday Camp'' (1977) *'' The Spy Who Loved Me'' (1977) – with Richard Maibaum *'' Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse'' (1978) *'' Moonraker'' (1979) *'' Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins'' (1985) *'' Steal the Sky'' (1988) – with Dorothy Tristan *'' Shadow of a Scream'' (1996) – a.k.a. ''The Unspeakable'' *'' Eruption'' (1997) *'' Stray Bullet'' (1998) *'' Dangerous Curves'' (2000)


References


External links

*
Christopher Wood
at the British Film Institute
Extract from ''Confessions of an Advertising Executive''.Interview with Christopher Wood
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wood, Christopher 1935 births 2015 deaths 20th-century English novelists 21st-century English novelists English male novelists 20th-century English screenwriters 20th-century English male writers 21st-century English male writers 20th-century pseudonymous writers 21st-century pseudonymous writers English male screenwriters Writers from the London Borough of Lambeth Confessions film series