"Jack Trevor Story, writer, eccentric and now star of his own television series, JACK ON THE BOX, is renowned for his idiosyncratic approach to life, his hatred of bureaucracy and his unflagging rejection of the obvious. In this volume of short pieces he lures the reader into his own eclectic and highly personal universe, centred somewhere on the edge of Hampstead Heath, some time in the 1970s, and presided over by the lovely Maggie (and her ghost). Why is Jack falling into the river, fully clothed? Who is Kaiser Konrad and why did he announce his own death by telegram? Will Maggie ever return from Belgium? We can't promise an answer to any of these questions -- but come in and try to find the real Jack Trevor Story, while he tries to find himself! Viewers of JACK ON THE BOX will recognise many of the themes dealt with here, along with the wit, wisdom and sheer presence of Britain's best comic novelist. And for those already familiar with the lives and times of Albert Argyll and Horace Spurgeon Fenton and all the magical characters which have at one time or another moved through the pages of Jack's life, here is a valuable glimpse into the reality of their creator."
Jack Story was the son of a baker's roundsman and a domestic servant. During the First World War his father was killed and then his mother moved to Cambridge and worked in one of the colleges.
As a youngster he worked as a butcher's lad making local deliveries. He stated that his early education was derived from 'The Modern Boy', 'Melody Maker' and Action publications.
Self-taught, he began his writing in the early 1940s and it was said that he regularly wrote 4,000 words a day and often took only two or three weeks to finish a novel.
He was married three times and had eight children and also gained a reputation as a ladies' man and apparently he was often seen with glamorous women. As a consequence his domestic life was said to be chaotic, owing to his serial infidelity and his bankruptcy, both of which occasionally provided inspiration for some of his work.
He first achieved success as a writer with the Pinetop Jones Western stories (writing under the pseudonym Bret Harding) and he later achieved great fame contributing to the Sexton Blake detective series - he wrote 20 titles for the Sexton Blake Library. He was also well known for his Horace Spurgeon novels and the Albert Argyle trilogy. He also used the pseudonyms Alex Atwell and Rex Riotti.
When he was penniless in the 1970s he moved to the then new town of Milton Keynes, where he was given a flat about the Museum of Rural Life. He meant to stay only one year, but remained there for the rest of his life.
He wrote a weekly column for 'The Guardian' in the 1970s and appeared on television in the series 'Jack on the Box' in 1979. He wrote several screenplays, including the film 'Mix Me a Person', and was heavily involved in the film version of his novel 'Live Now - Pay Later'. His final broadcast was an audio diary entitled 'Jack's Last Tape'. His novel 'The Trouble with Harry' (1949) was filmed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1955.
When someone once asked him why he didn't write an autobiography. He replied [referring to his novels and other writings], 'What do you think I've been doing all these years?'