The son of a shipyard worker, Mitchell also wrote under the pseudonyms James Munro and Patrick O. McGuire. He received BA and MA degrees from Oxford. After graduating he tried numerous jobs, including shipyard worker and civil servant before taking up teaching, in his own words he taught, "for some 15 years in almost every kind of institution from secondary modern school to college of art". In 1968 Mitchell moved to London to concentrate on writing.[1][2]
Mitchell created the ITV spy thriller Callan, starring Edward Woodward as a remorseful secret service assassin, and the BBC period drama When the Boat Comes In, starring James Bolam as a World War I veteran returning to his Tyneside hometown.[3] These programmes proved to be his most notable, and acclaimed work.
He married twice and had two children. Mitchell died in Newcastle upon Tyne on 15 September 2002.[4] He was 76.[5]
Bibliography
Novels
Here's a Villain! (1957), US Title: The Lady is Waiting
A Way Back (1959), also published as: The Way Back
Steady, Boys, Steady (1960)
Among Arabian Sands (1963)
Ilion Like a Mist (1969), also published as: Venus in Plastic
The Winners (1970)
The Evil Ones (1982)
KGB Kill (1987)
A Woman to Be Loved (1990)
An Impossible Woman (1992)
Leading Lady (1993)
So Far from Home (1995)
Indian Summer (1996)
Dance for Joy (1997)
Callan
A Magnum for Schneider (1969), US Title: A Red File for Callan
Russian Roulette (1973)
Death and Bright Water (1974)
Smear Job (1975)
Bonfire Night (2002)
Callan Uncovered (2014) and Callan Uncovered 2 (2015) - short story collections edited by Mike Ripley
When the Boat Comes In
When the Boat Comes In
When the Boat Comes In: The Hungry Years
When the Boat Comes In: Upwards and Onwards
Ron Hogget
Sometimes You Could Die (1985)
Dead Ernest (1986)
Dying Day (1988)
as Patrick O. McGuire
A Time for Murder (1955)
Fiesta for Murder (1962)
as James Munro
The Man Who Sold Death (1964)
Die Rich, Die Happy (1965)
The Money That Money Can't Buy (1967)
The Innocent Bystanders (1969)
The hero in his Munro books is a British agent named John Craig, who works, mostly reluctantly, for Department K. Mitchell wrote the screenplay for the 1971 film version of The Innocent Bystanders under his real name.