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Intro | English novelist | ||
Places | United Kingdom Great Britain England | ||
was | Writer Novelist | ||
Work field | Literature | ||
Gender |
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Birth | 12 July 1887 | ||
Death | 18 February 1955Hampshire, South East England, England, United Kingdom (aged 67 years) | ||
Family |
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Biography
Arthur Frederick Hobart Mills is one of a family of authors. His grandfather, Arthur Mills, was a Tory and an expert of colonial economies and governance. The senior Mills' India in 1858 describes the political and economic conditions in India after the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Arthur F. H. Mills is the brother of children's book author George Mills (Meredith and Co., King Willow) and author, explorer, and adventurer Lady Dorothy Mills (The Laughter of Fools, The Road to Timbuktu), to whom he was married from 1916 through their divorce in 1933.
Education and career
Captain Mills (Wellington College, Berkshire, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst) was wounded in World War I at La Bassée and wrote a pair of books, his first, about that experience: With My Regiment: From the Aisne to La Bassée (J. B. Lippincott & Co.: Philadelphia, 1916) and Hospital Days (T. Fisher Unwin: London, 1916) under the pseudonym Platoon Commander. At his wedding to Lady Dorthy Walpole in 1916, her wedding ring was made from a bullet that had been surgically removed from his ankle.
Despite favorable reviews, frequent impressions, and global translations of many of his earlier books (The Broadway Madonna, The Gold Cat), Mills eventually became known as a genre author of cheap crime and adventure novels. His work has been largely forgotten.
Mills died in Hampshire, United Kingdom, on 18 February 1955.