R.T.M. Scott


Reginald Thomas Maitland Scott, was a Canadian author of detective and espionage novels. He signed his works as R.T.M. Scott.

Biography

Scott was born in Woodstock, Ontario in 1882, the son of Alfred Maitland Scott and Elizabeth Bolby Willson. In 1901, he began studies at the Royal Military College in Kingston. He then worked as an engineer in India, Malaysia and from 1908 to 1911 in Ceylon. During the First World War, he served with the rank of captain in a Canadian Expeditionary Force in Belgium. Wounded, he was repatriated to Canada where he ended the war by working in the military administration.
After the war, he settled in New York and began a literary career. In 1920 he published What Bluff Dreams Are Made Of, where secret service agent Aurelius Smith first appears. From the second novel of the series, The Black Magician, Smith became a New York criminologist who, like Sherlock Holmes, a character Scott idolized, received clients in his apartment. In 1935, the popular success of the series gave rise to a radio drama whose scripts were for the most part drafted by Scott himself.
In 1933, Scott wrote the first two novels in the pulp magazine series called The Spider. The series was continued by another author, Norvell Page who wrote under the pseudonym Grant Stockbridge. In 1941, Columbia Pictures, made a fifteen part serial entitled The Spider Returns based on the character. Scott was also interested in paranormal psychic phenomena and published several articles on the subject.
In 1907, he married Leslie Grant. They had one son born on May 23, 1909 in Columbo, Ceylon, who bore the same name as him. Nicknamed Robert to distinguish him from his father, he worked at Popular Publications as an assistant editor and published a handful of short stories. Popular Publications was where The Spider comic series was published. He became a soldier during the Second World War and was killed in an accident in Germany on August 28, 1945 shortly after the war ended. He collaborated with his father in the writing of one or two of the first novels in the series whose hero was called, Spider, the masked avenger.
After his son's death he returned to writing but had little success. He died in New York in 1966 at the age of 83. In 2001, to mark the centenary of his entrance into RMC, the Massey library in Kingston, Ontario established a special collection of his books in acknowledgement of his lifelong affection for RMC.

Works

Novels