Sax Rohmer (born Feb. 15, 1883, Birmingham, Warwickshire, Eng.—died June 1, 1959, London) was an internationally popular British writer who created the sinister Chinese criminal genius Fu Manchu, the hero-villain of many novels. The character Fu Manchu later appeared in motion pictures, radio, and television.
From childhood Rohmer was interested in ancient Egypt, the Middle East, and the occult. After working briefly in the financial district of London and as a journalist there, his growing interest in East Asia led him into fiction writing. He took the middle name Sarsfield as a teenager and published his first stories under the name A. Sarsfield Ward. He began to publish exclusively as Sax Rohmer in 1912, and he eventually used this name personally as well as professionally.
Rohmer published Dr. Fu Manchu, the first of the series, in 1913. The inscrutable and aristocratic Fu immediately caught the public’s fancy, and Rohmer wrote several more novels about him over the next 45 years. These volumes include The Devil Doctor (1916), The Trail of Fu Manchu (1934), and Emperor Fu Manchu (1959), the latter written while Rohmer was living in the United States. Rohmer gradually transformed Fu Manchu from an entirely self-serving villain into a dedicated anticommunist.