Like Bulldog Drummond and his 4-round battle with Peterson, the Saint saga also had an arch-enemy Rayt Marius. Collected here together (in 2 omnibus volumes) for the first time is the complete battle that started in The Last Hero and ended with an epilogue reference in a concluding novella. The first round introduces Rayt Marius, a giant of a man and an evil tycoon, and centres around a wartime setting and a secret weapon that Marius wants to steal and pitted against him is the Saint. The Last Hero was published 15 years before the advent of nuclear weapons, and nine years before the outbreak of World War II, yet contains statements that could be seen as predicting these two world changing events.
Knight Templar sees the Saint and his associate, Roger Conway, chasing Marius and his superior, Prince Rudolf (Crown Prince of an unidentified country) across Europe. Templar suspects that Marius and Rudolf are planning to follow through with their scheme to spark a new World War and in any event, Templar has sworn to kill whichever of the two men murdered his friend at the close of the previous adventure.
Leslie Charteris was born in Singapore on 12 May, 1907. With his mother and brother, he moved to England, in 1919, and attended Rossall School in Lancashire before moving on to Cambridge University to study law. His studies there came to a halt when a publisher accepted his first novel. His third book, entitled Meet the Tiger!, was written when he was twenty years old and published in September 1928. It introduced the world to Simon Templar, aka the Saint.
He continued to write about the Saint until 1983 when the last book, Salvage for the Saint, was published. The books, which have been translated into over thirty languages, number nearly a hundred and have sold over 40 million copies around the world. They've inspired, to date, fifteen feature films, three TV series, ten radio series, and a comic strip that was written by Charteris and syndicated around the world for over a decade. He enjoyed travelling but settled for long periods in Hollywood, Florida, and finally in Surrey, England. He was awarded the Cartier Diamond Dagger by the Crime Writers' Association, in 1992, in recognition of a lifetime of achievement. He died the following year.
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