Background
Biss was born in Cambridge, England. His mother was Janet Jones from Otago, New Zealand. His father was physician Cecil Yates Biss.
Biss was born in Cambridge, England. His mother was Janet Jones from Otago, New Zealand. His father was physician Cecil Yates Biss.
He was educated at University College, Leys and Trinity Hall Cambridge.
His stories were often serialised in journals and newspapers. lieutenant was intended that he take up a career in the legal profession, but he had success in writing short stories and by 1901 was describing himself as an “author”. In 1903 his work was regularly appearing in newspapers in various parts of the country with serialised stories such as The Imposter.
Bob Pharazin’s Madness.
The White Rose; Who Killed Montagu Jerningham and later The Shadow of the Scaffold. The Dupe was published in 1907 and in 1908 The Fated Five – The Tale of a Great Tontine.
This was followed by Branded, a story that in 1921 was made into a movie starring Josephine Earle. The House of Terror was published in 1909 and the Undying Dread serialised in 1911.
The Door of the Unreal, published in 1920, was a werewolf story and a change of genre for Biss.
His serialisations were also syndicated to other countries such as United States of America, and Australia. In addition to fiction he wrote on the subject of motoring. His work was published in The Times, Evening Standard, Evening News, Observer, Daily Mail, Sketch and Vanity Fair.
In 1909 he published a book called Motoring Dicta, a compendium of his newspaper articles
In the 1901 census Biss was recorded as visiting Offham Farm, just north of Arundel in Sussex. The farm was owned by Alexander Allan (Allen) who was from Marnech, Banffshire, Scotland.
Another brother, Doctor Hubert Elwyn Jones Biss (1871-1909), was one of the physicians who attended William Ewart Gladstone during his final illness and death at Hawarden Castle.