I
‘Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of a critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it’.Footnote 1 What D. H. Lawrence is customarily assumed to have meant by this advice to the academic is this: value what the fiction writer has produced, the poem or the short story, and bracket or set to one side the novelist's biography and what it is they think they have accomplished with their work. ‘An artist is usually a damned liar’, Lawrence declares, and their art, if it is art, offers readers the only truth that counts.Footnote 2 Fair enough. We know next to nothing about Homer, certainly not enough to know if he was habitually sincere or a compulsive liar; so we focus on The Odyssey, its twenty-four books of dactylic hexameter, and there we have our work cut out for us. But sometimes biographies matter. Occasionally life and literature coalesce, resulting in a story that discloses the storyteller. Consider Johnny Cash, whose ‘Man in Black’ sobriquet not only captures the American country musician's on-stage clothing, but also his vocal committment to social justice for the poor as well as racially disadvantaged persons.Footnote 3
The Man in Black's 1986 novel about Saul of Tarsus, Man in White, is a work of Christian historical fiction.Footnote 4 I first read it in 2010. And that was about the time I began drafting the project that would become the book my publisher released in 2022 – a book that takes twelve much less famous writers and draws on my conversations with them to communicate both the choices and contexts behind their tales, and to reveal their own sense of what current followers of Jesus can learn from the storied faith that pulsates at the heart of their publications.Footnote 5 D. H. Lawrence would not be amused. But back to the Man in Black. Reading Man in White through the lens of Johnny Cash's convoluted life, one senses how and why the drug-addled singer-songwriter used Christian historical fiction to create an emotional connection with the troubled Apostle. Saul's story of fall and redemption made Cash aware of how sin and grace are woven throughout the mingled yarn of his own life.Footnote 6 And Cash admitted as much in his two autobiographies, deploying Pauline phrasing to describe his own Damascene experience, which occurred in October 1967 in Nickajack Cave on the Tennessee River.Footnote 7
Cash tells us that he journeyed into the Cave for two or three hours. Only when his flashlight gave out, and darkness descended on him, did he experience an unusual alchemy in his soul: God gifted Cash with a sense of peace and challenged him to quit the amphetamines that threatened to cut short his life. Darkness and light. Blindness and insight. Sometimes biographies matter. But what was it that Lawrence said? Artists are ‘hopeless liars’.Footnote 8 Johnny Cash is no exception. ‘The problem with the story and the way Cash told it is twofold. First, Nickajack Cave was underwater in the fall of 1967, as a Cash historian discovered after an extensive check of weather records. Second, Cash did not quit drugs that day’.Footnote 9 Sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.
But the truth is, also, simply this: Johnny Cash inspired my book of interviews with authors of Christian historical fiction. The earliest titles in this genre date from the 1830s, when imaginative efforts to situate historical or fictional characters in true-to-life settings revealing the faith of the authors as well as the protagonists first surfaced. Christianity's patristic period featured heavily in the novels of the Victorian era: St Cyril of Alexandria shows up in Hypatia, or New Foes with an Old Face, which Charles Kingsley first published in 1853; St Perpetua takes center stage in The African Fabiola: or, The Church of Carthage in the Days of Tertullian, which Joseph P. O'Connell first released in 1887; and, St Athanasius appears in Emma Leslie's 1895 novel, Sowing Beside All Waters: A Tale of the Early Church.Footnote 10 Even Johnny Cash connects to this nascent stage of the genre's development. He wrote Man in White after consulting the New Testament scholarship of Frederic W. Farrar, especially Farrar's Life and Works of St. Paul, which first appeared in 1879, three years before Farrar served as a pallbearer at Charles Darwin's funeral, and sixteen years before Farrar published his own Christian historical fiction, Gathering Clouds: A Tale of the Days of St. John Chrysostom.Footnote 11
Stories introducing lay Christians to their forebears in faith have been enjoying success ever since the days of Frederic W. Farrar. And the reason seems simple enough: many followers of Jesus value beautifully written, deftly characterised and pulse-quickening literary art that often seems more satisfying than dry, frequently tedious textbooks about theological doctrine. My book, The Writer and the Cross, surveys twelve recent stories. Texts include an illustrated children's book about St Ireneaus of Lyons, a novel about Martin Luther's Reformation, a screenplay focusing on Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and even a tale about Pope Francis narrated in popular manga style. I talk to the artists at some length. Most of them are little known or emerging storytellers. Some have published their work with a church or denominational press, others with a major publishing empire or popular print-on-demand platforms. All of them seem as eager as those of former times to show that past Christian lives can engage today's faithful, and many interviewees seem as fascinating as the Christian historical fictions they have published.Footnote 12
Working on my book has been instructive. I have learned how to trust tellers and their tales. And one artist, retired Lutheran pastor Arlon Stubbe, left our June 2020 conversation inspired to pen another fiction. An Inscrutable God, his novella about Nicaea told from Arius's point of view, was published one year later.Footnote 13 It's been fun. Yet what I would love to do is go back in time and converse with Louis de Wohl.
Born Ludwig von Wohl-Musciny, 1903, in Berlin, Germany, De Wohl published almost two dozen novels based on the lives of historical theologians, mostly canonised women and men, from 1947, the year he formally returned to the Roman Catholic Church, until his death, following a heart attack, in 1961, in Lucerne, Switzerland. Some might say that de Wohl represents the gold standard of Christian historical fiction in the immediate aftermath of World War II. Perhaps. But the gold seems tarnished these days. And his real life appears stranger than his fiction.
Making use of a personal file declassified and released to Great Britain's National Archives in 2008, this article sketches the story of how Britain's domestic spy agency, MI5, recruited Louis de Wohl to create horoscopes for Adolf Hitler and other Nazi leaders during the Second World War.Footnote 14 De Wohl was a polemical figure. His own origin story does not check out. His MI5 handlers found him embarrassingly showy. And many historians of British intelligence now dismiss him as a persuasive con-artist.Footnote 15 Yet six of de Wohl's pre-war novels were adapted for the silver screen; his post-war Christian stories remain bestsellers, according to Ignatius Press, his publisher; and, I suspect that de Wohl's story deserves greater attention if literary scholars are to better understand the development of the now highly successful genre of Christian historical fiction.Footnote 16
II
I Follow My Stars, the autobiography that de Wohl published in 1937, two years after moving from Germany and taking up exile in London, reads like fiction, bejeweled with dazzling details surrounding his champagne birth; his links to Hungarian nobility; his preference for taking female leads in school dramas; his nightly dreams about Imperial Rome; and, his friendship with famous actor and director Fritz Lang.Footnote 17 De Wohl first started writing at the age of six. His teachers were amazed, others compared him to Miguel de Cervantes, and a play about Jesus of Nazareth appeared by the time de Wohl turned seven.Footnote 18 He spent time working in a bank in Berlin during Germany's social revolution, and he grabs our attention with a lively retelling of the atmosphere and action surrounding monetary inflation, financial panic, and the proscription of the Jews; although de Wohl's family background remains murky, and this despite MI5's deep dive into his regal ancestry, there is little doubt that he was at least partly Jewish.Footnote 19
De Wohl's later escapades were just as imaginative as his youthful exploits. From bank teller to fashion designer, he eventually settled on a literary career, which he appears to have pursued with edgy enthusiasm. I Follow My Stars reveals, for example, that he once convinced an editor that he could write about the seedy side of Berlin through the eyes of a foreigner, an Englishwoman that he created and then named ‘Miss Edith Alice Gordon’.Footnote 20 De Wohl spent ten days as Edith: ‘She was smart, all in black, with a silver fox fur collar, big pearl earrings, a rather conspicuous bracelet, eye veil, [and] red-lacquered finger nails’, he said.Footnote 21 Not surprisingly, I Follow My Stars amounts to mythopoesis, James Parris declares:
By then [1937] an accomplished novelist and screenwriter, de Wohl's skill lay in constructing a story, marshalling, manipulating and controlling facts and images for dramatic effect. To that extent, the work could never be taken as actual self-portrait, nor would de Wohl the entertainer have intended it to be. He was working to create a theatrical effect, a memorable performance, rather than attempting to recreate the past accurately.Footnote 22
Writing also gave de Wohl the resources for extensive travel. He lived in Egypt as an Arab, witnessing ceremonies restricted to religious insiders, and his time on the African continent seems to have inspired an ideological pushback against mere naturalism or gross reductionism. By the mid-to-late 1920s, de Wohl was speaking of the world as spiritually significant, with ‘supernormal’ signs everywhere, evident to all peoples, albeit to some more than others.Footnote 23 A quick study, de Wohl became interested in astrology around 1930, and the German stargazing community embraced him.Footnote 24 Although he rejected planetary predestinationism, or some version of cosmic fate, he accepted that certain interstellar ‘tendencies’ influence our lives.Footnote 25 And he framed everything he had to say within a panentheistic metaphysic of connection.Footnote 26 ‘There can be no more feelings of loneliness’, he declared, ‘for one is always conscious of one's close harmony with the universe, and yet never before does one feel so free and independent’.Footnote 27 The sheer act of ‘to be’ itself, the Christian God creates, sustains, and guides ‘all aspects, laws, and planets’ within our unfolding cosmos, de Wohl believed.Footnote 28
Nazi Party members sought de Wohl's advice in the mid-1930s. They asked him to cast horoscopes and foretell events, since high-ranking officials by this time believed the positions of the stars affected human actions and character development, but de Wohl demurred.Footnote 29 He fled Germany, settled in London, and then approached British Intelligence with his plan to act as a one-man secret service of the skies—reading the astrological charts of the pivotal players in World War II. The plan worked. Great Britain's Sunday Express published the country's first newspaper column on astrology in 1930, and even if some commentators routinely dismissed the study of zodiac signs, the British people seemed sufficiently intrigued by 1935, the year de Wohl arrived in London, and so the Hungarian writer seized the cultural moment. De Wohl became an active informant for MI5 in 1938, one year after publishing I Follow My Stars, and he went on to charm several leading figures in British political life, including Lord Halifax, the Foreign Secretary, with his aspect analysis of Hitler's horoscope. By 1940, de Wohl had created his own department, the Psychological Research Bureau, within the Division of Psychological Warfare, and he was working hard to persuade his MI5 handlers of astrology's worth as a weapon in the war against Germany.Footnote 30
Yet de Wohl was a rising star threatening to eclipse the sun. I say this because the memos in his declassified personal file suggest many of his superiors found him insufferable. De Wohl ‘is extremely vain and has, in fact, many of the characteristics of a prima donna’, wrote one officer. ‘He is likely to be governed by nothing but self-interest’.Footnote 31 De Wohl was denounced as ‘a dangerous charlatan and confidence-trick merchant’, pilloried as ‘a complete scoundrel’, and maligned as ‘a bumptious seeker after notoriety’.Footnote 32 There is very little doubt that de Wohl created consternation among many officials. They struggled to confirm his aristocratic attribution, for example, and some were concerned that he might be an imposter, even a double-agent, because his wife had taken up residence in Chile, where she had been spotted socialising with German expatriates known to be Nazi sympathisers.Footnote 33 De Wohl's handlers also questioned his notice-me flamboyance. Several did not care for the way he seemed to overshare.Footnote 34 Although he signed the Official Secrets Act, for example, he never seemed to tire of regaling London party guests with his spy stories. De Wohl also informed his friends that he had been made a captain in the British Army, and he often wandered through the nation's capital in uniform, even if his personal file reveals very few details concerning this commission. After 1941, then, British intelligence officers were worried. Most thought de Wohl was off-putting, even shifty, and they noted that his forecasts were frequently hit-and-miss, certainly too ambiguous to take seriously as military strategy.Footnote 35
Although de Wohl came across as a pretender with a mysterious, if not murky, past, senior intelligence officials deemed him suitable enough to send to the United States to conduct anti-Hitler propaganda. De Wohl arrived in New York City in June 1941. Pitched to US audiences as a ‘modern Nostradamus’, de Wohl was sensational, appearing before capacity crowds and giving numerous interviews on the radio and in newspapers.Footnote 36 He returned to the United Kingdom in February 1942. But no one was there to greet him. The work dried up. And by 1943, two years before World War II ended, de Wohl was no longer employed in any kind of secret activities.
III
This fate – a loss of importance as well as income – triggered an identity crisis, which de Wohl managed in two ways. He returned to writing, especially historical novels, which instantiated ‘the blend of fact and fiction with which he always felt at ease’, and he rediscovered the Roman Catholicism of his youth.Footnote 37 Faith and fiction became de Wohl's way of surviving the years following World War II, when so much lay in ruins, and like many of the novelists – from Graham Greene to Iris Murdoch – featured in Allan Hepburn's recent study of Christianity in mid-century British literature, de Wohl used theologically-informed stories as a framework to communicate his hope for divinely-grounded peace and stability.Footnote 38 ‘British writers worked out their answers to the question of man [in World War II's immediate aftermath] in spiritual terms, often, though not exclusively, by recourse to the novel’, Hepburn contends.Footnote 39 And in his own struggle for spiritual wisdom, de Wohl reached back into Christian history, probed the narratives of Christian doctrine's makers and remakers, and then voiced how their discipleship – often forged in times of evil and suffering as well as conflict and war – addressed the postwar period's atmosphere of loss and uncertainty:
Thus in a way my career started at the end of the war. What it was I wanted to write about became clear to me very soon. I had seen the terrifying effect of a false ideal. Millions of Germans fell for the dynamic charlatanism of Hitler, they tried to ape him, to become little Hitlers themselves. And there is no country where people do not look up to someone and try to imitate him or her. Most people want to be led, if only by some outstanding example in this field or that. Therefore much depended upon these examples. Now what would be the examples that God would wish us to follow? Christ, of course. But then, Christ was not only a Man, He was also God, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity; and how could Mr. Smith hope to imitate Him?
Perhaps that was the main reason why the Church taught us to venerate the saints. They were human, and many of them had to combat all kinds of faults to reach sanctity in the end. I began to read books about saints. Soon I realized that most of them were written by devout people – mostly priests and nuns – for devout people. I could not imagine that anyone living at the outer fringe of the faith, to say nothing of a non-religious person, would read them. Yet it was exactly that type of person who needed a saint's example and guidance more than anyone else.
I began to ask questions and found that for a great many people a saint was ‘a person who was a religious fanatic’, or ‘a medieval phenomenon’, or simply ‘someone who prayed all the time’ (which last was much nearer the mark, though not in the sense they meant). Saints were ‘plastercast figures’, ‘goody-goodies’, ‘disagreeable zealots’. Of a hundred people I asked, not one replied ‘saints are what I ought to be’ or ‘saints are examples to be followed’.
But I had read enough now to sense, to feel, to know that apart from being just that, they were the most thrilling, the most interesting, the most courageous and even the most glamorous people of all. I decided to write historical novels whose heroes and heroines were saints.
Soon enough I discovered that the problems of the saints – and all around them – were the problems of our own time, and that they and only they were able to solve them.Footnote 40
Concisely, the art of fictionalising the lives of Christian saints became de Wohl's lay apostolate.
‘The most vital necessity of our time is the rediscovery of the Cross in our hearts’, de Wohl once explained to an interviewer, ‘so I wrote The Living Wood, the story of St Helena who rediscovered the True Cross’.Footnote 41 This novel, the first in a series of Christian historical fictions, appeared in 1947. In May 1948, de Wohl journeyed to Rome, had an audience with Pope Pius XII, and the Holy Father urged him to write about St Thomas Aquinas; a novel about the thirteenth-century Doctor of the Church appeared in 1950. In the years following, de Wohl produced a steady stream of stories focusing on Christian thinkers and themes. A novel based on St Augustine appeared in 1951, for example, and a literary retelling of the life of St Ignatius Loyola surfaced one year later. One or two of de Wohl's stories, like his 1958 tale of St Francis of Assisi, were adapted for film. Other fictions focused on St Francis Xavier, St Paul the Apostle, St Benedict of Nursia, and St Catherine of Siena.Footnote 42 Each story received glowing notices. ‘Here the dry bones of history put on flesh’, one reviewer wrote.Footnote 43 Another said: ‘Each [novel] is a masterpiece in its own right. Though differing in treatment, they are in one way alike—in the author's capacity for presenting the Saint of his choice as a living character, moving in a world that becomes astonishingly real through his genius for re-constructing the period and its atmosphere’.Footnote 44 The seemingly vain de Wohl no doubt enjoyed such commentary.
So much for the tale(s). Can we trust the teller? The declassified file on de Wohl gives us pause, since it shows that British intelligence struggled to see where truth ended and deceit began with de Wohl, the unreliable narrator of his own life. D. H. Lawrence once more: ‘An artist is usually a damned liar, but his art, if it be art, will tell you the truth of his day’.Footnote 45 De Wohl's interviews tell us explicitly who he wrote for and exactly why. In the faith of the Christian saints, the conflict-weary and anxiety-ridden de Wohl found consolation, and he offered his novels as a series in imaginative apologetics, showing the post-war generation the way through artistic beauty to the contentment and peace of Christian faith.Footnote 46 Meaningful reading of faith-filled fiction, especially literary art about the storied Christian past, can foster spiritual formation, de Wohl believed.Footnote 47 His novel on St Augustine focuses on the theologian of grace's restless heart in the last days of the Roman Empire. De Wohl's tale about the Poor Man of God draws lessons in faith from the battle between Assisi and Perugia. And de Wohl's story about St Thomas Aquinas sets the Common Doctor's serene discipleship in the context of the Crusades, his noble family's dysfunction, and the turbulence of Frederick II's court. In the end, de Wohl's work falls into the category of literary hagiography but not in a way that should at all be dismissive. And I cannot imagine reading or teaching Christian historical fiction without using the story around his stories as a guide.