Author
	
	Jonathan Burke
	Jonathan Burke (1922 - 2011)
Jonathan Burke was the working  name of English writer John Frederick Burke, who also wrote SF and  fantasy under his own name (particularly his short fiction) as well as J  F Burke and Robert Miall. 
Burke was born in Rye,  Sussex, but soon moved to Liverpool, where his father was a Chief  Inspec tor of Police. He became a prominent science fiction fan in the  late 1930s, and with David Mcllwain he jointly edited one of the  earliest British fanzines. 
The Satellite, to which another close  friend, Sam Youd, was a leading contributor. All three men would become  well-known SF novelists after the war, writing as Jonathan Burke,  Charles Eric Maine, and John Christopher, respectively.
During the early 1950s he wrote numerous science fiction  adventure novels and his short stories appeared regularly in all of the  leading SF magazines, most notably in 
New Worlds and Authentic Science Fiction. In  the mid-1950s he worked in publishing and as a public relations  executive for Shell, before being appointed as European Story Editor for  20th Century-Fox Productions in 1963.
            His cinematic  expertise led to his being commissioned to pen dozens of bestselling  novelizations of popular film and TV titles, ranging from such movies as  
A Hard Day's Night, Privilege, numerous Hammer Horror films, and 
The Bill. He also did adaptations of Gerry Anderson's 
UFO TV  series (as Robert Miall). Burke went on to write more than 150 books in  all genres, including work in collaboration with his wife, Jean; and  also published non-fiction works on an astonishing variety of subjects,  most notably music.
           After finally settling in the  Scottish countryside. Burke continued to write well into his eighth  decade, and in later years many of his best supernatural and macabre  short stories were collected and anthologized. He died on 21 September  201l, aged 89, shortly after completing his final novel, a contemporary  supernatural thriller 
The Nightmare Whisperers, which was published posthumously in 2012.