Francis Beeding is the pseudonym for the writers Hilary St. George Saunders (1898-51) and John Palmer (1885-44), who collaboratively wrote dozens of novels throughout the 1920s and 30s, and into the 1940s. Francis Beeding has over thirty novels to his credit, five of which have been adapted into feature films. Of these, his 1927 work The House of Dr. Edwardes remains the best known, as it formed the basis of Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece, Spellbound. Beeding also penned Death Walks in Eastrepps, a classic mystery which is perhaps his most widely-acclaimed work. During the Second World War, Saunders and Palmer turned their attention from mystery novels to cloak-and-dagger stories involving British efforts to combat the Nazis. The Ten Holy Horrors (1939) and Eleven Were Brave (1941) are two noteworthy efforts in this genre. After Palmer died in 1944, Saunders continued to write, publishing several more books about the war before retiring in 1950.

Books