Maxwell's first book, Harpoon at a Venture, was published on 26 May 1952 and was well received. Maxwell conceived a follow-up project to go to Sicily, initially in the quest for an alleged distantly related renegade aunt who had fled there. He persuaded the publisher
Burns & Oates to advance him £500 in late 1952 but with no book emerging from his first visit to Sicily, this turned into a considerable liability for Maxwell. In March 1954 he met
Mark Longman, the last of the founding family to run the
Longman publishing company. They developed a good personal rapport, and Longman published most of Maxwell's future books. Longman agreed to advance Maxwell £1,000 for two books on Sicily, which allowed him to pay off the Burns & Oates advance. In 1957 Maxwell signed up with literary agent
Peter Janson-Smith, who was also agent for
James Bond author
Ian Fleming. Maxwell had shared a nanny with Ian and
Peter Fleming, some 30 years previously, one of a number of uncanny overlaps. Janson-Smith was Maxwell's agent until his death, and beyond: he was one of Maxwell's literary trustees. He became a source of financial and emotional support to Maxwell, whose repeated temper tantrums and insistent financial demands made him a difficult author to manage. In addition to the books, Gavin Maxwell did regular reviews, mainly of new books related to nature, for
The Observer newspaper. This was a vital, if limited, source of income, particularly in the late 1960s. Maxwell maintained a home in London from 1957 to 1965 at number 9
Paultons Square in
London. This was the home of Kathleen Raine, who rented out the ground floor and basement to Maxwell, she initially retained the top floor as a separate flat. The property has a
Blue Plaque marking Maxwell's time there.
Sicily The two publishers' advances allowed Maxwell to make several visits to
Sicily from late 1952 to 1954. From this emerged two books,
God Protect me from my Friends in 1956 (Maxwell's version of the
Gabriel Sénac de Meilhan quotation was "I can look after my enemies, but God protect me from my friends."); and then
The Ten Pains of Death in 1959. The first book was a mixture of travelogue and investigative reportage, relating to the violent death of
Salvatore Giuliano.
The Ten Pains of Death was a broader set of essays and interviews about the Sicilian way of life and in particular the experience of poverty. Maxwell's time in Sicily had a devastating aftermath, as a result of libel cases brought by two Italian politicians. The first case was brought to the Italian courts by
Bernardo Mattarella in 1958; the other, in 1965, by , Prince of Montereale, through the English courts. Both
plaintiffs said that Maxwell had libelled them in three pages of
God Protect me from my Friends, where Maxwell suggested that the politicians were Salvatore Giuliano's paymasters and were implicated in the 1947
May Day massacre at a Communist Party rally. Maxwell lost both cases. In the Mattarella case Maxwell had to pay a fine of £3,000, equivalent to more than £60,000 in 2025 values. He also got an 8 month prison sentence, which he did not serve: Maxwell benefited from a government amnesty the following year. In the 1965 trial, Prince Alliata was awarded £400 by the
High Court of Justice jury, but the judge,
Hildreth Glyn-Jones, awarded costs against Maxwell and his publishers Longman, and these were in excess of £10,000, equivalent to £170,000 in 2025. These were crushing financial blows to Maxwell, who was quoted as saying about the judge: "I walked out of the court knowing that it would be years, if ever, before I could repay my share. I hope I shall meet his Lordship in an after life - if we are heading in the same direction."
Iraq In January 1956, Maxwell went to Iraq and toured the
reed marshes of the Euphrates with explorer
Wilfred Thesiger, Maxwell's future wife's first cousin, once removed. Maxwell spent February and March 1956 on a
tarada, a 12 metres long, 1 metre wide traditional canoe. These seven weeks were to have an important bearing on the rest of Maxwell's life. The experience of travelling with Thesiger was physically and mentally painful, with Maxwell required to sit cross-legged for hour after hour, and once it was over Maxwell decided he would not repeat the experience. Maxwell greatly admired Thesiger for his masterly abilities as an explorer, but Maxwell was very much constrained as the junior member of the expedition, and made uncomfortable by Thesiger's authoritarian aloofness. Thesiger certainly had his doubts about Maxwell, their personalities were very different, but he was impressed by Maxwell's ornithological and hunting abilities. While in Basra, Maxwell encountered
Gavin Young for the first time. Though he was fourteen years younger than Maxwell, Young hailed from a family of intrepid merchants, was the more experienced traveller and had known Thesiger for longer. The two Gavins were to become close friends, though Young often struggled with aspects of Maxwell's personality. Maxwell's account of his time in Iraq appears in
A Reed Shaken By The Wind, later published in the United States under the title
People of the Reeds. This book won the 1957
Heinemann prize and was hailed by
The New York Times as "near perfect". Maxwell, Thesiger and Young were the triumvirate of post 1945 British explorers that wrote about the now largely vanished culture of the
Marsh Arabs, and of these Maxwell's book arguably got the better reviews, including from
Harold Nicolson and
Cyril Connolly.
Camusfeàrna File:Derelict bothy at Sandaig - geograph.org.uk - 1261471.jpg|thumb|upright=1.45|The surviving cottage at Sandaig, next to Maxwell's former home, April 2009.
"Derelict bothy at Sandaig", by Nick Ray, licensed under CC-BY-SA-2.0 From 1948 Maxwell had been using a remote, at that stage
off-grid, cottage, on a
peppercorn rent in
Sandaig, a house which had been a
croft and home to the local lighthouse keeper of the Sandaig Light, southwest of
Glenelg. There was one other cottage there, which still remains, and they were opposite
Isleornsay over on Skye, with a parallel lighthouse, marking the shipping channel through the
Sound of Sleat and the entrance to
Loch Hourn. He initially used this house as an occasional writer's retreat, but after Maxwell acquired his otters it became his main home. In his books he called the location
Camusfeàrna,
Gaelic for
Bay of Alders.
Ring of Bright Water Ring of Bright Water was Maxwell's best selling book. It remains in print, has sold over two million copies and was translated into more languages than any other book by Maxwell. It was an autobiographical account of Maxwell's time with his otters at
Camusfeàrna. The quality of Maxwell's writing brought him a critically acclaimed reputation as a descriptive author, as well as a brief respite from his financial troubles. At different times in 1960-1961 it was briefly the best selling non-fiction book in the UK, Commonwealth and USA. There were four follow up books: ''The Otters' Tale
(1962), similar to Ring
but rewritten with children in mind; The Rocks Remain
(1963); Raven Seek thy Brother
(1969); and The Ring of Bright Water Trilogy'' (2001). The first three were written by Maxwell, the trilogy was devised and edited after his death.
North Africa In 1960–1962, he made several trips to
Morocco and
Algeria. He published accounts of his experiences in North Africa, including his description of the aftermath of the 1960 Agadir earthquake, in
The Rocks Remain (1963). In Morocco, he was assisted by the monarchy's head of Press Services and Minister of Information
Moulay Ahmed Alaoui, and by the anticolonial activist and journalist
Margaret Pope, who Maxwell referred to in
The Rocks Remain under a pseudonym, "Prudence Hazell." Pope recruited Maxwell to travel to Algiers in January 1961 to collect information for the Algerian revolutionary
National Liberation Front (FLN). Maxwell also began research for a non-fiction book tracing the dramatic lives of the last rulers of Marrakech under the French, eventually published in 1966 as
Lords of the Atlas: The Rise and Fall of the House of Glaoua 1893–1956. During the Moroccan
Years of Lead, the regime there considered his book subversive and banned its importation.
Eilean Bàn After losing his Sandaig home, Maxwell moved to the lighthouse keepers' cottages on
Eilean Bàn (White Island), an island between the
Isle of Skye and the Scottish mainland by the village of
Kyleakin. Maxwell referred to his new home as Kyleakin Lighthouse. He invited
John Lister-Kaye to join him on Eilean Bàn to help him build a zoo on the island and work on a book about British wild mammals. Lister-Kaye accepted the invitation, but both projects were abandoned with Maxwell's death in September 1969. ==Gavin Maxwell's friendship with Kathleen Raine==