Dick Francis was born in South Wales in 1920. He was a young
rider of distinction winning awards and trophies at horse shows
throughout the United Kingdom. At the outbreak of World War II he
joined the Royal Air Force as a pilot, flying fighter and bomber
aircraft including the Spitfire and Lancaster. He became one of the
most successful postwar steeplechase jockeys, winning more than 350
races and riding for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
After his retirement from the saddle in 1957, he published an
autobiography, The Sport of Queens, before going on to write more
than forty acclaimed books. A three-time Edgar Award winner, he
also received the prestigious Crime Writers’ Association’s Cartier
Diamond Dagger, was named Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of
America, and was awarded a CBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List
in 2000. He died in February 2010, at age eighty-nine, and remains
among the greatest thriller writers of all time.
Felix Francis, a graduate of London University, is an
accomplished outdoorsman, marksman, and pilot who has assisted with
the research of many of his father's novels. The co-author and
author of numerous Dick Francis novels, most recently Pulse, he
lives in England.
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