Oscar Cook


Richard Martin Oscar Cook was a British author of novels, non-fiction works and short stories with a supernatural theme.

Life

Cook worked as a Government official in British North Borneo from 1911 until 1919. In December 1914 he was Assistant District Officer at Semporna, and it was at this time that he compiled a vocabulary of Bajau words. He later held District Officer posts.
On returning to Britain, Cook wrote an autobiographical account of his time in Borneo. It was suggested that he should approach the Curtis Brown literary agency and the book was allocated to Christine Campbell Thomson, an agent there. It was she who gave the book its title, Borneo: Stealer of Hearts, and placed it with Hurst & Blackett, who published it in 1924. At the time it was considered one of the most authoritative books on Borneo. Cook was also then writing short stories concerned with supernatural themes, several of which were directly influenced by his time in Borneo. By 1934 an autobiographical note accompanying one of his short stories stated that since his return to England he had been an author, editor, publisher, actor, secretary to a dramatic school, and in business.
Cook married Christine Campbell Thomson, but they were divorced in 1938. He died on the twenty-third of February 1952.
Between 2022 and early 2025, genre researcher Johnny Mains tracked down a further twenty-eight 'lost' Cook tales, which included one written under the pseudonym 'Martin Fosse'. These were published with the nine known Cook stories in His Beautiful Hands, published by Ramble House in February 2025.
As of February 2025, there is only one 'lost' short story left to find, 'The Owl's Warning' from Pep Stories, October 1927.

Publications

Non fiction

Borneo: the Stealer of Hearts Hurst and Blackett London 1924

Novels

The Second Wave 1930 or earlier, translated into the Dutch as ''Gij zult niet''

Short stories

  • "Golden Lilies"
  • "Si Urag of the Tail"
  • "On the Highway"
  • "The Great White Fear"
  • "Corn-Gold Hair"
  • "The Creature of Man"
  • "The Sacred Jars"
  • "Piecemeal"
  • "Boomerang"
  • "His Beautiful Hands"
  • "The Crimson Head-Dress"