Conrad Lyddon Voss Bark (9 March 1913 – 23 November 2000) was a writer and a correspondent for the BBC and the Times.
Conrad Voss Bark was born in 1913 to a family of Quakers in the Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire.
He was a conscientious objector and a volunteer for the ambulance service in London during World War II.
Afterwards he worked for Charles Barker City, a public relations company and became the spokesman for the British Trawler Federation in 1973, during the Second Cod War.
[1] His non-fiction work mainly concerns fly fishing, and he gave lessons at the Arundell Arms fly fishing school in Lifton, Devon, which was the property of his fourth wife Anne Fox-Edwards, MBE (1928-2012), a former actress and the daughter of Sir Charles Wilfrid Bennett.