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John Mortimer (1) (1923–2009)

Author of The First Rumpole Omnibus

For other authors named John Mortimer, see the disambiguation page.

John Mortimer (1) has been aliased into John Mortimer.

146+ Works 15,766 Members 295 Reviews 44 Favorited

Series

Works by John Mortimer

Works have been aliased into John Mortimer.

The First Rumpole Omnibus (1983) 975 copies, 6 reviews
Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders (2004) 818 copies, 18 reviews
Rumpole of the Bailey (1978) 796 copies, 16 reviews
Paradise Postponed (1985) 727 copies, 10 reviews
Summer's Lease (1988) 619 copies, 12 reviews
The Second Rumpole Omnibus (1987) 589 copies, 7 reviews
Rumpole Rests His Case (2001) 580 copies, 9 reviews
Rumpole and the Primrose Path (2002) 570 copies, 5 reviews
Rumpole and the Reign of Terror (2006) 546 copies, 19 reviews
Rumpole à la Carte (1990) 509 copies, 5 reviews
Rumpole on Trial (1992) 505 copies, 7 reviews
Trials of Rumpole (1979) 476 copies, 9 reviews
Rumpole Misbehaves (2007) 469 copies, 20 reviews
Rumpole for the Defence (1982) 445 copies, 7 reviews
Rumpole and the Golden Thread (1983) 439 copies, 6 reviews
Clinging to the Wreckage (1982) 418 copies, 5 reviews
Titmuss Regained (1990) 395 copies, 5 reviews
Rumpole's Return (1980) 385 copies, 7 reviews
Rumpole and the Angel of Death (1996) 384 copies, 11 reviews
Rumpole and the Age of Miracles (1988) 344 copies, 7 reviews
Rumpole's Last Case (1987) 338 copies, 6 reviews
Rumpole at Christmas (2009) 309 copies, 20 reviews
The Third Rumpole Omnibus (1997) 302 copies, 3 reviews
Quite Honestly (2005) 251 copies, 10 reviews
Dunster (1992) 237 copies, 2 reviews
Rumpole (1982) 226 copies, 1 review
Felix in the Underworld (1997) 211 copies, 2 reviews
The Summer of a Dormouse (2000) 211 copies, 6 reviews
The Sound of Trumpets (1998) 209 copies, 2 reviews
The Best of Rumpole : A Personal Choice (1993) 184 copies, 6 reviews
Where There's a Will (2003) 158 copies, 5 reviews
The Oxford Book of Villains (1992) — Editor — 150 copies
Charade (1986) 142 copies, 3 reviews
In Character (1983) 135 copies, 2 reviews
Tea with Mussolini [1999 film] (1999) — Screenwriter — 122 copies, 5 reviews
The Narrowing Stream (1989) 121 copies, 2 reviews
Like Men Betrayed (1953) 86 copies, 2 reviews
Character Parts (1986) 79 copies
The Scales of Justice (2005) 71 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey, The Complete Series [videorecording] (2004) — Creator; Writer — 65 copies, 1 review
The Rapstone Chronicles (1991) 55 copies, 1 review
In Love and War [2001 TV movie] (2001) — Screenwriter — 45 copies
Merry Murder (1994) 45 copies
In Other Words (2008) 23 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey: Set 3 (Seasons 5-7) (2005) — Author; Writer — 18 copies, 1 review
Rumpole of the Bailey (1980) 17 copies
The Dock Brief (1958) 10 copies
The Judge (1967) 7 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey: The Complete First Season (1978) — Writer — 5 copies
The Running Man [1963 film] — Writer — 4 copies, 1 review
Naked Justice (2002) 3 copies
John Mortimer Plays (1989) 2 copies
Marble Arch 1 copy
Rumming Park (1948) 1 copy

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into John Mortimer.

Claudius the God (1934) — Introduction, some editions — 4,640 copies, 49 reviews
Orley Farm (1861) — Introduction, some editions — 768 copies, 16 reviews
The Best of Wodehouse (1938) — Introduction, some editions — 385 copies, 3 reviews
The Big Book of Christmas Mysteries (2013) — Contributor — 352 copies, 10 reviews
The Best of Modern Humor (1983) — Contributor — 312 copies, 2 reviews
The Pleasure of Reading (1992) — Contributor — 205 copies, 8 reviews
A Flea in Her Ear (1907) — Translator, some editions — 177 copies, 2 reviews
Brideshead Revisited [1981 TV miniseries] (1981) — Screenwriter — 150 copies, 3 reviews
The Best British Mysteries 2005 (2005) — Contributor — 141 copies, 3 reviews
A New Omnibus of Crime (2005) — Contributor — 106 copies, 2 reviews
Murder at Christmas (2019) — Contributor — 74 copies, 3 reviews
The Best British Mysteries 2006 (2005) — Contributor — 68 copies, 1 review
Murder in Midwinter (2020) — Contributor — 60 copies
Notable Historical Trials, Volumes I-IV (1999) — Introduction — 56 copies
Sittings, 1979-1983 (1983) — Introduction — 46 copies
Great Tales of Crime and Detection (1992) — Contributor — 43 copies
Bunny Lake is Missing [1965 film] (1965) — Writer — 39 copies, 1 review
Murder under the Mistletoe and Other Stories (1992) — Contributor — 39 copies
Murder Most Merry (2002) — Contributor — 37 copies
Death Cruise (1999) — Contributor — 37 copies, 3 reviews
Die Fledermaus [libretto] (1974) — Translator, some editions — 31 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey: Seasons One and Two (2004) — Writer — 31 copies
Crème de la Crime (2000) — Contributor — 23 copies, 1 review
Trial and Error [1962 film] — Play — 20 copies
Contemporary One-Act Plays (Heinemann Floodlights) (1976) — Contributor — 19 copies
A Feast of Stories (1996) — Contributor — 16 copies
Lewis and Lewis: The Life and Times of a Victorian Solicitor (1983) — Foreword, some editions — 14 copies
Murder on Trial (1994) — Contributor — 14 copies
The World of Law, Volume I : The Law in Literature (1960) — Contributor — 13 copies
Don Quixote [2000 TV movie] (2000) — Screenwriter — 11 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey: Seasons 3 & 4 (1986) — Writer — 11 copies
Will Shakespeare [1978 TV mini-series] (2003) — Screenwriter — 9 copies
Laurie Lee: A Many-coated Man (1998) — Contributor — 6 copies, 1 review
The Ebony Tower [1984 TV film] — adaptor — 5 copies, 1 review
A Christmas Anthology (2011) — Contributor — 3 copies
Rumpole and the Man of God [TV Series Episode] (2009) — Writer — 3 copies
Rumpole of the Bailey: The Complete Third Season (1991) — Writer — 3 copies
Paradise Postponed: The Complete Series — Screenwriter — 2 copies
Rumpole at Sea [TV Series Episode] — Writer — 2 copies
Edwin [1984 TV movie] (2003) — Screenwriter — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (106) autobiography (146) biography (146) British (224) British fiction (85) British literature (86) British mystery (96) courtroom (93) crime (258) crime fiction (112) England (227) English (116) English literature (134) fiction (2,327) humor (1,035) John Mortimer (102) law (379) lawyers (94) legal fiction (74) legall (150) literature (92) London (76) memoir (77) mystery (1,383) non-fiction (88) novel (194) read (132) Rumpole (480) short stories (423) to-read (283)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Mortimer, John Clifford
Birthdate
1923-04-21
Date of death
2009-01-16
Gender
male
Education
Harrow School
University of Oxford (BA|1943 - Brasenose College)
Occupations
lawyer
playwright
novelist
writer
barrister
screenwriter (show all 7)
autobiographer
Organizations
Burma Campaign UK (patron)
Royal Court Theatre (president)
Royal National Theatre (board member)
Inner Temple (1948)
Garrick Club
Awards and honors
British Book Award (Lifetime Achievement Award, 2005)
British television Writer of the Year (1980)
Fellow, Royal Society of Literature (chairman, 1989-1999)
Commander, Order of the British Empire (1986)
Knight Bachelor (1998)
Queen's Counsel (1966) (show all 8)
Italia Prize (1957)
Master of the Bench, Inner Temple (1975)
Agent
Peters Fraser and Dunlop
Relationships
Mortimer, Penelope (wife | divorced)
Craig, Wendy (lover)
Mortimer, Jeremy (son)
Smith, Evelyn (aunt)
Short biography
John Mortimer was born in London to Clifford Mortimer, a barrister, and his wife Kathleen May, née Smith. Mortimer attended the Dragon School and Harrow, originally intending to become an actor, and then a writer. His father persuaded him to follow him into a legal career. Mortimer went up to Oxford University, where he read law. During World War II, he worked for the Crown Film Unit, writing scripts for propaganda documentaries. Mortimer made his debut as an original playwright with The Dock Brief, first broadcast on BBC Radio in 1957 and later adapted for television.
Mortimer was called to the Bar at age 25 in 1948. His early career focused on wills and divorces, but he later undertook criminal cases. He's now best remembered for creating the character of Horace Rumpole, a barrister at London's Old Bailey courthouse.
He was married to Penelope Fletcher, who wrote as Penelope Mortimer. The couple divorced in 1971, and he married Penelope Gollop, with whom he had two daughters, Emily Mortimer and Rosie Mortimer. He was awarded the CBE in 1986, and knighted in 1998.
Cause of death
complications of a stroke
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Hampstead, London, England, UK
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Place of death
Turville Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

336 reviews
Just over thirty years ago (though sometimes now it feels more like one hundred) I began my career in the UK Civil Service and found myself working in Bloomsbury Tax Office. Despite the name, it was neither situated in Bloomsbury nor included that area in its ‘parish’ It did, instead, cover London’s Inns of Court, and the greater part of the self-employed taxpayers who fell within my domain were either barristers (no baristas back then) or partners in long-established solicitors’ show more firms working out of chambers that seemed to have changed little since Dickens described them in Great Expectations. Among my allocation of taxpayers was a certain John Mortimer QC, who retained a place in chambers though by then he had more or less completely given up his practice at the bar having established himself as one of the most successful writers of his generation, seeming capable of switching between novels, short stories, plays and television or film scripts more or less at will. It was back then that I first started reading the Rumpole stories that have proved a source of huge entertainment ever since.

This was the original collection of six short stories that introduced the querulous, self-opinionated yet also strangely endearing Rumpole to the world. Of course, it is difficult now to imagine Rumpole without seeing and hearing Leo McKern, who immortalised him in the long-running television series.

Mortimer was clearly a very accomplished barrister, having (unlike Rumpole) taken silk as a Queen’s Counsel, and also sitting occasionally as a Recorder (one of the various grades of judge within the English legal framework). Rumpole never prosecutes, always choosing to work for the defence. He also eschews legal jargon, and even the technicalities of the law itself, preferring to pepper his summation with quotations from Wordsworth, and relying on a pleasing blend of theatricality and pragmatism to win his cases.

The stories are certainly a joy to read, beautifully written and mixing carefully crafted humour and satire against the pomposity of the legal system (though Rumpole himself is, in his way, possibly the most pompous of them all. The cast of supporting characters is also finely drawn, ranging from Rumpole’s frosty, long-suffering wife, Hilda (generally referred to by him as ‘She Who Must be Obeyed’), the feeble commercial lawyer Claude Erskine-Browne and smug head of Chambers, Guthrie Featherstone QC MP. They all complement each other admirably, allowing Mortimer to poke fun at all aspects of the legal profession.

In this first volume the stories are a lot longer than most of their successors, perhaps reflecting the fact that Mortimer had not yet identified Rumpole’s potential for portrayal on television. They are, however, a glorious mix of humour and social comment, minutely observed and joyously recounted.
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John Mortimer's father gave him the same advice I once gave my granddaughter. If you want to become a writer, first seek another career. This will pay the bills while you struggle as a writer, and it will also give you something to write about. It will put you in daily contact with real people in real-life situations.

Mortimer took his father's advice and became a successful barrister, as well as a successful author, most notably of the Horace Rumpole stories. He tells all about it in show more “Where There's a Will,” his 2003 book of essays that can also pass as a memoir.

Much of this book is about his experiences practicing law and the amazing people and situations he encountered in this profession. There is much here, too, about the writing profession. Yet most of these essays are simply about the art of living. They have titles like "Getting Drunk," "Listening," "Lying," "Living with Children," "Male Clothing," "Giving Money to Beggars," "Eating Out," and "Looking after Your Health." They are all short and, in most cases, amusing. And sometimes full of practical advice.

He suggests, for example, to avoid eating at restaurants with menus full of page after page of entrees. Those restaurants with few options, he says, probably know how to prepare those meals very well.

He says he learned to listen to others because that is part of a lawyer's job, and he highly recommends the practice. Most people have fascinating stories to tell, if only we can stop talking long enough to listen to them.

Mortimer says many things worth quoting:

"One of the miracles of life is that few people pass through it without finding someone to love them."

"Murder has this in common with Christmas, most of it goes on in the family circle."

"The trouble with double-beds is that people tend to go to sleep in them."

Mortimer's Rumpole stories make wonderful reading, and this is no less true of this short book of short essays.
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I know I read this when I was about 20 and remembered it fondly. Not sure that "the great writer" struck me as the odious person he is back then. Probably not since this level of misogyny and general entitlement was pretty much the expected norm for men and hadn't been called out as being pretty sick and pathological. It should be easier to laugh at him for this ridiculous behavior, but I just want to punch him in the mouth every time he opens it. What a complete asshole going around as if show more no one else has any right to exist except to serve him. He also lies, cheats and steals whenever he can get away with it. Should have been drowned at birth. show less
½
Rumpole is a comfort read for me so I was delighted when this book I had forgotten about resurfaced in the festive season of 2023. I'm sure I couldn't live with Rumpole but, on the other hand, I'd find it hard to put up with "She Who Must Be Obeyed" so I guess they are perfect for one another.

Rumpole is defending another of the Timson clan when he notices a winsome young woman gazing at him from the visitors' gallery. Tiffany Timson has never needed Rumpole's assistance before unlike most of show more her relatives but she has come to ask him to take on the case of her husband, Dr. Mahmood Khan. He was taken away one morning from their home by plain clothes police who mentioned as they were leaving that he was being arrested under the Terrorism Act. Dr. Khan had been born in Pakistan but came to England many years ago. He swears he has had no contact with terrorists and, in fact, loves England and the Queen passionately. England has abrogated a number of cornerstones of the common law system in recent years and Rumpole finds that people charged under the Terrorism Act don't have any right to know what they are accused of. It's rather difficult to mount a defence when the evidence of the supposed crime is withheld. Rumpole has an ace up his sleeve though provided to him by an old client and he uses it to good effect. Despite the fact that the other members of his chambers and his wife are convinced his client is guilty (why else would the police have arrested him?), Rumpole manages to get to the bottom of the matter and gets his client released and absolved of all guilt.

She Who Must Be Obeyed (aka Hilda Rumpole) is now writing her memoirs unbeknownst to Rumpole. She is also being courted by a judge and is seriously wondering if she might do better with him than with Rumpole. Rumpole is oblivious to this romance but, fortunately, Hilda comes to her senses. Now, Rumpole just has to worry about what she might put in those memoirs.
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Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Leo McKern Actor, Narrator, Narrator, Reader
Robert Hardy Narrator
Roger Bamford Director
Julian Amyes Director
Martyn Friend Director
John Gorrie Director
Herbert Wise Director
Brian Farnham Director
Mike Vardy Director
Jim Goddard Director
Graham Evans Director
Derek Bennett Director
Stuart Burge Director
Peter Hammond Director
Tony Smith Director
Martin Werner Contributor
Eric Newby Author
Richard Stoneman Adaptor, Dramatist
Paul Cox Illustrator
Charles Dickens Contributor
Timothy West Narrator, Reader
Irene Shubik Producer
Ian Fleming Contributor
Arthur Conan Doyle Contributor
P. G. Wodehouse Contributor
Wilkie Collins Contributor
Bram Stoker Contributor
Angela Carter Contributor
Patricia Highsmith Contributor
John Milton Contributor
Jorge Luis Borges Contributor
Raymond Chandler Contributor
Geoffrey Chaucer Contributor
Anthony Trollope Contributor
Dick Francis Contributor
James M. Cain Contributor
Graham Greene Contributor
Joseph Conrad Contributor
Mark Twain Contributor
Thomas Hardy Contributor
Homer Contributor
Fyodor Dostoyevsky Contributor
Cicero Contributor
Damon Runyon Contributor
Molière Contributor
Eric Ambler Contributor
E. W. Hornung Contributor
Benedict Cumberbatch Narrator, Reader
Cher Actor
Alessio Vlad Composer
Jasmine Hyde Reader, Narrator
Cathy Sara Narrator, Reader
Sam Leith Foreword
Marilyn Imrie Director
Bill Wallis Narrator
Patrick Tull Narrator, Narrator
Remo Ceserani Introduction
Asya Sherman Cover designer
Christopher Green Cover artist
Rosemary Herbert Author photograph
Maria Delogu Translator
Rob Page Cover artist

Statistics

Works
146
Also by
98
Members
15,766
Popularity
#1,442
Rating
4.0
Reviews
295
ISBNs
731
Languages
9
Favorited
44

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