
British author of mostly thrillers, though among 37 books he also published children's fiction. Household's flight-and-chase novels, which show the influence of John Buchan, were often narrated in the first person by a gentleman-adventurer. Among his best-know works is' Rogue Male' (1939), a suggestive story of a hunter who becomes the hunted, in 1941 filmed by Fritz Lang as 'Man Hunt'. Household's fast-paced story foreshadowed such international bestsellers as Richard Condon's thriller 'The Manchurian Candidate' (1959), Frederick Forsyth's 'The Day of the Jackal' (1971), and Ken Follett's 'Eye of the Needle' (1978) . In 1922 Household received his B.A. in English from Magdalen College, Oxford, and between 1922 and 1935 worked in commerce abroad, moving to the US in 1929. During World War II, Household served in the Intelligence Corps in Romania and the Middle East. After the War he lived the life of a country gentleman and wrote. In his later years, he lived in Charlton, near Banbury, Oxfordshire, and died in Wardington. Household also published an autobiography, 'Against the Wind' (1958), and several collections of short stories, which he himself considered his best work.
Series
Books

The Spanish Cave
1936

The Third Hour
1938

Dance of the Dwarfs
1968

Escape into Daylight
1976

The Last Two Weeks of Georges Rivac
1978

Arabesque
1948
The Lady in the Lake (Raymond Chandler), Rogue Male (Geoffrey Household), Psycho (Robert Bloch), The Hound of the Baskervilles (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle), and Doctor No (Ian Fleming).
1977

Rogue Justice
1982

The Exploits of Xenophon
1955

Red Anger
1975

Rogue Male
1939

Watcher in the Shadows
1960

The Courtesy of Death
1967

Hostage
London
1978

A Rough Shoot
1951

Doom's Caravan
1971

Fellow Passenger
1963

Olura
2013

The Sending
1980

A Time to Kill
1951