Wilbur Addison Smith (9 January 1933 – 13 November 2021) was a Zambian-born British-South African novelist specialising in historical fiction about international involvement in Southern Africa across four centuries, seen from the viewpoints of both black and white families. An accountant by training, he gained a film contract with his first published novel When the Lion Feeds. This encouraged him to become a full-time writer, and he developed three long chronicles of the South African experience which all became best-sellers. He acknowledged his publisher Charles Pick's advice to "write about what you know best", and his work takes in much authentic detail of the local hunting and mining way of life, along with the romance and conflict that goes with it. By the time of his death in 2021 he had published 49 books and had sold more than 140 million copies, 24 million of them in Italy (by 2014).
Wilbur Smith
Author details
- Aliases:
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Uilbur Smit, উইলবার স্মিথ, Wilbur Smith, and 15 others
Wilbur A. Smith, Уилбур Смит, ווילבור סמיט, Wilbur Addison Smith, Smith, Wilbur A Smith, Vilbers Smits, Смит, W.A. Smith, Vilburs Smits, סמית וילבור, Уилбър Смит, ویلبر اسمیت, ウィルバー スミス, ウィルバー・スミス - Born:
- Jan. 9, 1933
- Died:
- Nov. 13, 2021