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King Kong author Edgar Wallace's links to the Birmingham Post

But the story of author – and former Birmingham Post writer – Edgar Wallace has been lost to history with most of his novels now out of print

Edgar Wallace in 1914

It’s a film image possibly more famous than any other – a giant ape clutching a damsel in distress atop New York’s Empire State Building.

But the story of author – and former Birmingham Post writer – Edgar Wallace has been lost to history with most of his novels now out of print.

Now writer Neil Clark has written the life story of the incredible wordsmith, who churned out more than 170 books and once wrote a novel in just a weekend.

His association with the 1933 film became a defining point of his life – but it also represented the end of a long and illustrious career during which he was described as “one of the most prolific writers of the 20th century”.

Sadly, Wallace was to die from undiagnosed diabetes in the early stages of the drafting process for King Kong in 1932, aged just 56, and never got to see the incredible impact the film would have.

The movie’s publicity declared: “The strangest story ever conceived by Man… the greatest film the world will ever see”.

 

Film historian Denis Gifford said: “For once the catch-lines were right. In the history of horror movies, indeed of movies, King Kong still towers above them all.”

Mr Clark said: “Edgar Wallace was once the most popular writer in Britain and it’s a great pity that in recent years he has tended to be neglected.