Cooper was educated at
Radley College where he took charge of the military band and distinguished himself in
rugby and
cricket. He was capped at cricket for the Yorkshire schoolboys; in later life he smashed
Denis Compton for six with such vigour that he toppled a spectator sitting in a wheelchair into a nearby pond. His publishing business was based upon monumental works such as
Lord Anglesey's eight-volume
History of the British Cavalry (1973-95) and the Famous Regiments series. He was always on the look out for what
George Orwell called "unofficial history", such as Antonia Hunt's
Little Resistance (1982), the extraordinary story of an English schoolgirl's experiences in German-occupied France. Cooper died in 2013, aged 79. ==Personal life==