Derek Parker (born 1932) is a British writer and broadcaster. He is the author of numerous works on literature, ballet, and opera, and with his wife
Julia of several books about astrology.[1]
Biography
He was born in
Looe,
Cornwall, and educated at
Fowey Grammar School (1941–49). He worked as reporter with The Cornishman (
Penzance) (1949–55) then as drama critic with The
Western Morning News (
Plymouth) (1956–58).[2] In 1958 he worked as an interviewer and announcer at
TWWCardiff, and subsequently for forty years as a freelance radio broadcaster, compiling and introducing many programmes both for domestic radio and for the
BBC World Service.[3] He was editor of The Poetry Review (1966–70) [4] and of The Author[5] (1984-2002). He is a Fellow of the Society of Authors [6]
In 2003 he and his wife moved to
Sydney, returning to the UK in 2022.
Hoax
In the early 1980s, "William Blatchford" claimed to have located the Memoirs of
Cora Pearl, which he said had been published in 1890, after Pearl's death. Supposedly an earlier version of the book published in 1886, this volume purported to date back to an earlier date, perhaps even as early 1873. Decidedly more frank and sexually explicit than the 1886 memoirs, their idiomatic English – expressive of a provincial, unsophisticated use of the language – convinced many of the work's authenticity when the memoirs were published by Granada under the title Grand Horizontal, The Erotic Memoirs of a Passionate Life. However, Blatchford turned out to be a pseudonym adopted by the real author of the 'memoirs', Derek Parker, a former chairman of the
Society of Authors, who later admitted that he had hoaxed Granada.[7][8]