In 1920 he wrote two stories for The Sexton Blake Library: The Case of The Japanese Detective in SBL #119 and The House with the Red Blinds for SBL #143.[3]
Wignall worked for the Cambria Daily Leader, the South Wales Daily Post, the Morning Leader, the Sporting Life and the Daily Mail.[1] He then became the Chief Sportswriter of the Daily Express.[4] While he was at The Daily Express in the 1930s, William Pollock the paper's cricket correspondent, stated that Wignall was earning more than £100 a week.[4]
The New York Times described Wignall as "once of The London Daily Express and at one time Britain's most famous sports writer".[5]
Bibliography
Wignall, Trevor (1921). The Life Of Commander Sir Edward Nicholl. London: Mills & Boon.
Wignall, Trevor; Knox, G. D (1923). Atoms. London: Mills & Boon.
Wignall, Trevor (1923). Thus Gods Are Made. London: Hutchinson.
Wignall, Trevor (1924). The Story Of Boxing. New York: Brentano's.