Len Ortzen


Len Ortzen was an English writer and translator from French.

Life

Ortzen was born Leonard Edwin Ortzen on 18 December 1912. He grew up in the East End of London, and his first novel, Down Donkey Row, was appreciatively reviewed by Hugh Massingham as "a picture, at once faithful and amusing, of the East End". However, his second novel was not so well-received, and thereafter Ortzen stuck to translation and writing non-fiction. In the late 1930s he had moved to Paris, and after the war he and his wife ran a guest house in Brittany.
Ortzen married Florence Anne Rowbotham in 1940.
Ortzen died of cancer in Stroud, Gloucestershire, on 15 January 1979.

Works

Translations

Other

  • Down Donkey Row, London: Cresset Press, 1938.
  • The Two Husbands, London, 1939.
  • Rue de Paris, London, 1939.
  • The Gallic Land: Country life in France, London: Phoenix House, 1952.
  • Our Guests Paid in Francs, London, 1953.
  • Just Across the Channel, London: Phoenix House, 1954.
  • Your Guide to the Loire Valley, London: Alvin Redman, 1968.
  • Stories of famous disasters at sea, London: Barker, 1969.
  • Famous lifeboat rescues, London: Barker, 1971.
  • Famous Arctic adventures, London: Barker, 1972.
  • Stories of famous submarines, London: Barker, 1973.
  • Stories of famous sea raiders, London: Barker, 1973.
  • Imperial Venus: the story of Pauline Bonaparte-Borghese, London: Constable, 1974.
  • Stories of famous shipwrecks, London: Barker, 1974.
  • Stories of great exploration, London: Barker, 1975.
  • Stories of famous survivals, London: Barker, 1975.
  • Guns at sea: the world's great naval battles, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1976. Foreword by Ludovic Kennedy.
  • Strange mysteries of the sea, London: Barker, 1976.
  • Strange stories of UFOs, London: A. Barker, 1977.
  • Stories of famous fighting ships. Vol. 1, In the days of steam, London: A. Barker, 1978.
  • Fighting ships in the age of steam, London: A. Barker, 1978.
  • Famous stories of the Resistance. London: A. Barker, 1979.