Geoffrey Trease
Geoffrey Trease FRSL was a prolific British writer who published 113 books, mainly for children, between 1934 and 1997, starting with Bows Against the Barons and ending with Cloak for a Spy in 1997. His work has been translated into 20 languages. His grandfather was a historian, and was one of the main influences on his work. He is best known for the children's novel Cue for Treason.
Trease is best known for writing children's historical novels, whose content reflects his insistence on historically correct backgrounds, which he meticulously researched. His ground-breaking study Tales Out of School pioneered the idea that children's literature should be a serious subject for study and debate. When he began his career, his radical viewpoint was a change from the conventional and often jingoistic tone of most children's literature of the time, and he was one of the first authors who deliberately set out to appeal to both boys and girls and to feature strong leading characters of both sexes.
Life and work
Trease was born in Nottingham in 1909, third and youngest son of George Trease, a wine merchant, and his wife Florence Dale, a doctor's daughter. He won a scholarship to Nottingham High School, where he wrote stories, poems, and a three-act play; awarded a Classics scholarship to Oxford University, he found his tutors dull and after a year, left university without a degree and moved to London. Intent on becoming a writer, he also worked with slum children and joined a left-wing group called the "Promethean Society" whose members included Hugh Gordon Porteus and Desmond Hawkins.Trease described his own childhood reading as 'a diet of classist and racist historical adventure' but in 1933, he came across a translation of a Russian book titled Moscow has a Plan, in which a Soviet author dramatised the First five-year plan for young readers. Inspired by this, in 1934 Trease wrote Bows Against the Barons, a left-wing update of Robin Hood that showcased a radical approach to historical literature for young people. This included the use of modern English, rather than linguistic mannerisms, strong male and female characters, often from less privileged levels of society and meticulous attention to detail. An enduring belief in equality and fairness is a theme in many of his books, as are links between the historical settings of his novels and contemporary issues.
Bows Against the Barons was translated into Russian and sold immensely well there; his next work, Comrades for the Charter was less successful but Cue for Treason in 1940 proved enduringly popular and remains his best known work. His subjects cover a wide range of historical periods, such as The Crown of Violet, set in Ancient Greece, The Red Towers of Granada, Middle Ages, The Hills of Varna, Renaissance Europe, Cue for Treason and Cloak for a Spy, Elizabethan England, Fire on the Wind and Popinjay Stairs, Restoration London, Thunder of Valmy, French Revolution, The White Nights of St Petersburg, the Bolshevik Revolution and Tomorrow Is a Stranger, World War II.
Trease also wrote modern school stories, including the five Black Banner novels set in the Lake District, the first being No Boats on Bannermere), as well as a number of adult novels, history, plays for radio and television, and biographies. Trease authored a guide aimed at teaching creative writing to young adults, The Young Writer: A Practical Handbook. He wrote three books of autobiography: A Whiff of Burnt Boats, Laughter at the Door, and in the last year of his life, the final part, Farewell the Hills. This was written for his family and friends, and published privately after his death.
Trease was an acknowledged influence on authors such as Hester Burton and inspired others, such as Rosemary Sutcliff and Leon Garfield. While in some ways they outpaced him, he continued to write and published 113 books before 'calling it a day' at the age of 88 because of illness. Many were translated for foreign markets, including Asia and Europe. In the United States he won the New York Herald Tribune Book Award for the Children's Spring Festival 1966 for This is Your Century.
He married Marian Boyer in 1933 and they spent most of their marriage in Colwall, near the Downs School, Great Malvern. They had one daughter, Joyce and moved to Bath to be closer to her, shortly before Marian's death.
Works
Children's writing
Junior novels
- Bows Against the Barons
- Comrades for the Charter
- The New House at Hardale
- Call to Arms
- Missing from Home
- Mystery on the Moors
- The Christmas Holiday Mystery
- Detectives of the Dales
- In the Land of the Mogul
- Cue for Treason
- Running Deer
- Grey Adventurer
- Black Night, Red Morning
- Trumpets in the West Revised Edition 1994 Paperback only
- Silver Guard
- The Hills of Varna US title: Shadow of the Hawk
- No Boats on Bannermere
- The Secret Fiord
- Sir Walter Raleigh: Captain and Adventurer
- Under Black Banner
- The Crown of Violet US title: Web of Traitors
- Black Banner Players
- The Barons' Hostage Revised Edition 1973
- The Silken Secret
- The Island of the Gods
- Black Banner Abroad
- Word to Caesar US title: Message to Hadrian
- The School Beyond the Snows
- The Gates of Bannerdale
- Mist over Athelney US title: Escape to King Alfred
- Thunder of Valmy US title: Victory at Valmy
- The House of Blue Dragons
- The Maythorn Story
- Change at Maythorn
- Follow my Black Plume
- A Thousand for Sicily
- The Red Towers of Granada
- The White Nights of St Petersburg
- Horsemen on the Hills
- Popinjay Stairs
- The Iron Tsar
- Violet for Bonaparte
- The Seas of Morning Paperback only
- The Field of the Forty Footsteps
- Mandeville
- Saraband for Shadows
- The Cormorant Venture
- Tomorrow is a Stranger
- The Arpino Assignment
- Shadow Under the Sea
- Calabrian Quest
- Song for a Tattered Flag Paperback only
- Fire on the Wind
- Bring Out the Banners
- No Horn at Midnight
- Curse on the Sea Paperback only
- Cloak for a Spy Paperback only
- Danger in the Wings
For younger readers
- The Fair Flower of Danger
- The Dutch are Coming
- Bent is the Bow
- The Runaway Serf
- A Masque for the Queen
- A Ship to Rome
- A Voice in the Night
- The Chocolate Boy
- When the Drums Beat
- The Spycatchers
- The Claws of the Eagle
- The Running of the Deer
- A Flight of Angels
- Aunt Augusta's Elephant
- Henry, King to Be
- Page to Queen Jane
- Elizabeth, Princess in Peril
- Mission to Marathon
Other children's books
- Red Comet: A Tale of Travel in the USSR
- Fortune, My Foe: The Story of Sir Walter Raleigh
- The Mystery of Moorside Farm - also contains The Secret of Sharn and In the Blood
- The Young Traveller in India and Pakistan
- Enjoying Books
- The Young Traveller in England and Wales
- Seven Queens of England
- Seven Kings of England
- The Young Traveller in Greece
- Edward Elgar, Maker of Music
- The Young Writer
- Wolfgang Mozart : The Young Composer
- Seven Stages
- This is Your Century
- Seven Sovereign Queens
- Byron, A Poet Dangerous to Know
- D. H. Lawrence, The Phoenix and the Flame
- Days to Remember, A Garland of Historic Anniversaries Short Stories
- Britain Yesterday
- A Wood by Moonlight and other Stories Short Stories
- Timechanges: The Evolution of Everyday Life
- Looking through History: The Edwardian Era
- Hidden Treasure
Adult writing
Novels
- Such Divinity
- Only Natural
- Snared Nightingale
- So Wild the Heart
Autobiography
- A Whiff of Burnt Boats
- Laughter at the Door
- Farewell the Hills
Other adult works
- The Supreme Prize Poems
- The Unsleeping Sword
- Walking in England
- North Sea Spy
- Clem Voroshilov: The Red Marshall
- Army without Banners
- Tales Out of School Revised Edition 1964
- The Italian Story: From the Earliest Times to 1946
- The Grand Tour
- Matthew Todd's Journal
- Nottingham: A Biography
- The Condottieri: Soldiers of Fortune
- Samuel Pepys and his World
- London: A Concise History
- Portrait of a Cavalier Biography
Published plays
- After the Tempest
- The Dragon Who Was Different and Other Plays for Children
- The Shadow of Spain and Other Plays
Awards
- New York Herald Tribune Award for This is Your Century