In this episode of pplpod, we take a deep dive into the astonishing life of Dennis Wheatley — a man whose résumé sounds almost too wild to be real.
He was, at different times and somehow all at once, a Mayfair wine merchant, one of the bestselling thriller writers in the English-speaking world, a major popularizer of occult fiction, and a strategic deception planner for the British government during World War II.
This is not just a literary biography. It’s a story about narrative power.
Using historical accounts and biographical records (including Wheatley’s documented life and career), we trace how the same skills that made him successful in the luxury wine trade — understanding taste, status, presentation, and persuasion — later helped him build a publishing empire and eventually contribute to wartime deception operations that helped mislead Nazi Germany.
In this episode, we explore:
- Wheatley’s early life and expulsion from school for allegedly forming a secret society
- his World War I service in the Royal Field Artillery and experience at Passchendaele
- the collapse of the family wine business during the Great Depression
- his pivot to writing after financial disaster
- the breakout success of The Forbidden Territory (1933)
- how The Devil Rides Out and other occult thrillers made him the defining mainstream voice of black magic fiction
- his real-world research into the occult scene, including contact with figures like Aleister Crowley
- his innovative Crime Dossiers (interactive mystery case files decades ahead of modern true crime kits)
- and his wartime role in the London Controlling Section, where fiction-writing skills became tools of strategic military deception
We also dig into Wheatley’s worldview and politics — including his deeply conservative, anti-socialist beliefs, his postwar anxieties, and the extraordinary “letter to posterity” he buried in a sealed container, intended for future generations after what he believed would be Britain’s collapse under socialism.
This episode is ultimately about the architecture of belief: How do people come to believe a story? How do you sell a bottle of wine, a satanic thriller, or a fake invasion plan with the same core psychological tools?
If you’re into British history, WWII espionage, occult fiction, Aleister Crowley, Hammer Horror, James Bond origins, thriller writers, and the hidden links between storytelling and propaganda, this one is for you.