1929 in literature
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1929.
Contents
1 Events
2 New books
2.1 Fiction
2.2 Children and young people
2.3 Drama
2.4 Poetry
2.5 Non-fiction
3 Births
4 Deaths
5 Awards
6 References
Events
- January 10 – The Adventures of Tintin: First appearance of Hergé's Belgian comic book hero Tintin as Tintin in the Land of the Soviets (Les Aventures de Tintin, reporter..., au pays des Soviets), begins serialization in the children's newspaper supplement Le Petit Vingtième.
- February–August – Voltaire's Candide (1759) is held to be obscene by the United States Customs Service in Boston.
- February – The first of Margery Allingham's crime novels to feature Albert Campion, The Crime at Black Dudley (U.S. title: The Black Dudley Murder), is published in England.
- March – Norah C. James's first novel, Sleeveless Errand, is held to be obscene on publication in London[1] for its portrayal of the city's bohemian life; an edition is subsequently published in Paris by Jack Kahane's Obelisk Press.[2]
- April 1 – The Faber and Faber publishing house is established in London by Geoffrey Faber with T. S. Eliot as literary editor.
- c. June? – The first of Gladys Mitchell's crime novels, introducing her psychologist detective character Mrs Bradley, Speedy Death, is published in England.
- July – British publisher William Collins, Sons launches The Detective Story Club as an imprint with Edgar Wallace's novelization of The Terror.
- July 5 – Scotland Yard seizes 13 paintings of male and female nudes by D. H. Lawrence from a Mayfair (London) gallery on grounds of indecency under the Vagrancy Act 1838.[3]
- August – Censorship of Publications Act sets up the Censorship of Publications Board in the Irish Free State.
- August 15 – The first Ellery Queen mystery novel, The Roman Hat Mystery, is published in New York City.
- Midyear – Serialization begins of one of the first original Thai novels and the first by a woman: 'Dokmai Sot' (M. L. Bubpha Kunjara Nimmanhemin)'s Sattru Khǫng Čhaolon (Her Enemy), followed shortly by 'M. C. Akat' (Prince Arkartdam-keung Rapheephat)'s semi-autobiographical Lakhǫn Haeng Chiwit (The Circus of Life). Thai writers join with Kulap Saipradit in the Suphapburut literary group.[4]
- October – Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir become a couple, having met for the first time while he studied at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Twenty-one-year-old De Beauvoir becomes the youngest person ever to obtain the agrégation in philosophy, and comes second in the final examination, beaten only by Sartre.
- October 11 – Seán O'Casey's play The Silver Tassie, set in World War I, premières at the Apollo Theatre, London,[5] directed by Raymond Massey and starring Charles Laughton and Barry Fitzgerald, with set design by Augustus John. Rejected the year before by W. B. Yeats for the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, it will not open in Ireland until 1935.
- October 29 – Release (in the United States) of the first sound film adaptation of a Shakespeare play: The Taming of the Shrew, starring Mary Pickford and her husband Douglas Fairbanks.
- December – George Orwell returns to England after living in Paris.
Hugo Gernsback first uses the term "science fiction" in its modern sense for his pulp magazine Amazing Stories.- Father Ronald Knox codifies the "rules" for the Golden Age of Detective Fiction in a "Decalogue".[6]
Samuel Roth publishes a pirated edition of James Joyce's 1922 novel Ulysses in New York (the first complete edition of any kind printed in the United States); he serves two prison terms for publishing an obscene work.[7]
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is prohibited in the Soviet Union because of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's interest in the occult.
Foyles bookshop in London moves to new larger premises in the Foyles Building, Charing Cross Road.
Monotype introduces Stanley Morison's revival of the Bembo typeface for book printing.
New books
Fiction
Richard Aldington – Death of a Hero
Roberto Arlt – Los siete locos (The Seven Madmen)
Marcel Aymé – The Hollow Field
M. Barnard Eldershaw – A House Is Built
Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay – Pather Panchali (Song of the Road, book publication)
Hamilton Basso – Relics and Angels
Vicki Baum – Menschen im Hotel (People at a Hotel, translated as Grand Hotel)
Anthony Berkeley- The Piccadilly Murder
- The Poisoned Chocolates Case
Georges Bernanos – Joy
Algernon Blackwood – Dudley & Gilderoy: A Nonsense
Mary Borden – The Forbidden Zone
Elizabeth Bowen – The Last September
Mateiu Caragiale – Craii de Curtea-Veche
Agatha Christie- The Seven Dials Mystery
Partners in Crime (short stories)
Jean Cocteau – Les Enfants Terribles
Colette – Sido
Miloš Crnjanski – Сеобе (Seobe, Migrations)
Aleister Crowley – The Stratagem and other Stories
Mazo de la Roche – Whiteoaks of Jalna
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry – Courrier sud (Southern Mail)
Alfred Döblin – Berlin Alexanderplatz
Lloyd C. Douglas – Magnificent Obsession
Arthur Conan Doyle – The Maracot Deep
Pierre Drieu La Rochelle – Hotel Acropolis (Une Femme à sa fenêtre)
Susan Ertz – The Milky Way
William Faulkner – The Sound and the Fury
Jessie Redmon Fauset – Plum Bun: A Novel Without a Moral
Edna Ferber – Cimarron
C. S. Forester – Brown on Resolution
Zona Gale – Borgia
Rómulo Gallegos – Doña Bárbara
Gaito Gazdanov – Вечер у Клэр (Vecher u Kler, An Evening with Claire)
Floyd Gibbons – The Red Napoleon
Jean Giono- Colline
- Lovers are Never Losers
Joseph Goebbels – Michael: A German Destiny in Diary Form (Michael: Ein deutsches Schicksal in Tagebuchblättern)
Henry Green – Living
Julien Green – The Dark Journey
Graham Greene – The Man Within
Dashiell Hammett- The Dain Curse
- Red Harvest
Ernest Hemingway – A Farewell to Arms
Richard Hughes – A High Wind in Jamaica
Masuji Ibuse (井伏 鱒二) – Salamander and Other Stories
Frigyes Karinthy – Minden másképpen van (Everything Is Different, short stories)
Anna Kavan – A Charmed Circle
Eric P. Kelly – The Trumpeter of Krakow
Takiji Kobayashi (小林 多喜二) – Kanikōsen (The Cannery Boat)
Kwee Tek Hoay – Drama dari Krakatau (Drama of Krakatoa; serialization)
Oliver La Farge – Laughing Boy
Nella Larsen – Passing
Sinclair Lewis – Dodsworth
Claude McKay – Banjo
Frederic Manning (anonymously) – The Middle Parts of Fortune: Somme & Ancre, 1916 (subscription edition)
Alberto Moravia – Gli indifferenti (Time of Indifference)
Leopold Myers – The Near and the Far
Irène Némirovsky – David Golder
Peadar O'Donnell – Adrigool
Katherine Anne Porter – Flowering Judas
Katharine Susannah Prichard - Coonardoo
J. B. Priestley – The Good Companions[8]
Ellery Queen – The Roman Hat Mystery
Erich Maria Remarque – All Quiet on the Western Front (Im Westen nichts Neues; book publication and first English translation)
Henry Handel Richardson (Et Florence Robertson) – Ultima Thule (final part of The Fortunes of Richard Mahony)
Ole Edvart Rølvaag – Peder Victorious (Peder Seier)
John Steinbeck – Cup of Gold: A Life of Sir Henry Morgan, Buccaneer, With Occasional Reference to History
Jun'ichirō Tanizaki (谷崎 潤一郎) – Some Prefer Nettles (蓼喰う蟲)
Wallace Thurman – The Blacker the Berry
Sigrid Undset – In the Wilderness
S. S. Van Dine – The Scarab Murder Case
Lynd Ward – Gods' Man (wordless "novel in woodcuts")
Thomas Wolfe – Look Homeward, Angel
S. Fowler Wright- Dawn
- The World Below
Children and young people
Edgar Rice Burroughs – Tarzan and the Lost Empire
Catherine Christian – The Luck of the Scallop Shell
Josephine Elder – Evelyn Finds Herself
Erich Kästner – Emil and the Detectives (Emil und die Detektive)
Eric P. Kelly – The Trumpeter of Krakow
William Maxwell Reed – The Earth for Sam; the story of mountains, rivers, dinosaurs and men (non-fiction)
Alison Uttley – The Squirrel, The Hare and the Little Grey Rabbit (introducing Little Grey Rabbit)
Drama
Jacinto Benavente – Vidas cruzadas (Short Cuts)
Henri Bernstein – Mélo
Bertolt Brecht – The Baden-Baden Lesson on Consent (Badener Lehrstück vom Einverständnis)
Ferdinand Bruckner – Krankheit der Jugend (Illness of Youth)
St. John Ervine – The First Mrs. Fraser
Jean Giraudoux – Amphitryon 38
Patrick Hamilton – Rope
Denis Johnston – The Old Lady Says "No!"
Agha Hashar Kashmiri – Rustom O Sohrab
Frederick Lonsdale – Canaries Sometimes Sing
Kaj Munk – I Brændingen
Eugene O'Neill – Dynamo
Stanisława Przybyszewska – The Danton Case (Sprawa Dantona)
Elmer Rice – Street Scene
George Bernard Shaw – The Apple Cart
Ahmed Shawqi – Masraa' Kliyubatra (The Death of Cleopatra)
Ödön von Horváth – Rund um den Kongreß
Poetry
Robinson Jeffers – Dear Judas and Other Poems
W. B. Yeats – The Winding Stair
Non-fiction
Ada Boni – Il talismano della felicità (The Talisman of Happiness)
G. K. Chesterton – The Everlasting Man
Aleister Crowley – Magick in Theory and Practice
Mahatma Gandhi – The Story of My Experiments with Truth
Robert Graves – Goodbye to All That
Walter Lippmann – A Preface to Morals
A. A. Milne – Those Were the Days
Tomas O'Crohan – An t-Oileánach (The Islandman)
Charles Kay Ogden – Basic English
Alice Prin – Kiki's Memoirs
I. A. Richards – Practical Criticism- Various authors – Our Exagmination Round His Factification for Incamination of Work in Progress: essays in support of James Joyce
A. E. Waite – The Holy Kabbalah
E. B. White and James Thurber – Is Sex Necessary?
Alfred North Whitehead – Process and Reality
Virginia Woolf – A Room of One's Own
Births
January 9
Brian Friel, Irish dramatist (died 2015)
Heiner Müller, German dramatist (died 1995)
January 26 – Jules Feiffer, American cartoonist and writer
February 6 – Keith Waterhouse, English journalist and novelist (died 2009)
February 16 – Peter Porter, Australian-born British poet and educator (died 2010)
February 17 – Chaim Potok, American author (died 2002)
February 18 – Len Deighton, English novelist
March 1 – Thuppettan, Malayalam-language Keralan playwright (died 2019)
March 7 – Dan Jacobson, South African novelist (died 2014)
April 1 – Milan Kundera, Czech-French novelist
May 14 – George Selden, American author (died 1989)
May 16 – Adrienne Rich, American poet and essayist (died 2012)
June 2 – Norton Juster, American children's writer and academic
June 11 – George Garrett, American poet and novelist (died 2008)
June 12
Brigid Brophy, English novelist and critic (died 1995)
Anne Frank (Annelies Marie Frank), German-born Dutch child diarist (died 1945)
June 18 – Grigorijus Kanovičius, Jewish Lithuanian writer
June 20 – Anne Weale, English writer (died 2007)
June 25 – Eric Carle, American children's writer and illustrator
July 8 – A. T. Q. Stewart, Northern Irish historian and academic (died 2010)
July 22 – U. A. Fanthorpe, English poet (died 2009)
July 31 – Lynne Reid Banks, English novelist
August 14 – Thomas Meehan, American screenwriter
August 18 – Anatoly Kuznetsov, Russian dissident novelist (died 1979)
August 21 – X. J. Kennedy, American poet and translator
August 27 – Ira Levin, American novelist and playwright (died 2007)
August 29 – Thom Gunn, Anglo-American poet (died 2004)
October 7 – Robert Westall, English novelist and children's writer (died 1993)
October 21 – Ursula K. Le Guin, American science fiction and fantasy author (died 2018)
October 23 – Shamsur Rahman, Bengali poet (died 2006)
November 7 – Steve Carter, American playwright
November 13 – Theo Aronson, South African-born British biographer (died 2003)
December 12 – John Osborne, English playwright and screenwriter (died 1994)
December 16 – James Moore, English author
December 19 – Howard Sackler, American dramatist and screenwriter (died 1982)
December 23 – Monique Watteau (Monique Dubois), Belgian fantasy novelist and artist
December 31 – Robert B. Silvers, American literary editor (died 2017)
Deaths
January 15 – Leonard Cline, American novelist, poet and journalist (heart failure, born 1893)[9]
January 29 – Hans Prutz, German historian (born 1843)
February 6 – Charlotte Carmichael Stopes, Scottish writer and women's rights activist (born 1840)
March 7 – Auguste Groner, Austrian detective fiction writer (born 1850)
March 26 – Katharine Lee Bates, American lyricist (born 1859)
March 31 – Santeri Nuorteva, Soviet journalist and politician (born 1881)
April 12 – Flora Annie Steel, English writer (born 1847)
April 16 – Sir John Morris-Jones, Welsh grammarian and poet (born 1864)
April 21 – Lucy Clifford (Mrs. W. K. Clifford), English novelist, dramatist and screenwriter (born 1846)
May 19 – Mary E. Mann, English novelist and short story writer (born 1848)
June 8 – Bliss Carman, Canadian poet (born 1861)
June 18 – Vedam Venkataraya Sastry, Sanskrit and Telugu poet, critic and dramatist (born 1853)
June 22
Alfred Brunswig, German philosopher (born 1877)
Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler, English writer of romances and children's books (born 1860)
June 25 – Georges Courteline, French dramatist and novelist (born 1858)
June 28 – Edward Carpenter, English socialist poet and philosopher (born 1844)
July 15 – Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Austrian novelist and poet (born 1874)
July 31 – José de Castro, Portuguese journalist (born 1868)- August – Mary MacLane, Canadian feminist writer (born 1881)
September 12 – Rainis, Latvian poet and playwright (born 1865)
September 19 – Francis Darwin, English botanist and academic (born 1848)
October 8 – Max Lehmann, German historian (born 1845)
October 19 – Alexandru Davila, Romanian dramatist and diplomat (born 1862)
December 10 – Harry Crosby, American publisher and poet (suicide, born 1898)
Unknown dates
Grace Rhys, Irish novelist and poet (born 1865)
Dallas Lore Sharp, American nature writer (born 1870)
Evelyn Whitaker, English children's writer (born 1844)
Awards
James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: J. B. Priestley, The Good Companions
James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Lord David Cecil, The Stricken Deer: or The Life of Cowper
Newbery Medal for children's literature: Eric P. Kelly, The Trumpeter of Krakow
Newdigate prize: Phyllis Hartnoll
Nobel Prize in literature: Thomas Mann
O. Henry Award: Dorothy Parker, "Big Blonde" (short story)
Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Elmer L. Rice, Street Scene
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Stephen Vincent Benét, John Brown's Body
Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: Julia Peterkin, Scarlet Sister Mary
References
^ "Seized Novel Condemned". The Times. London. 1929-03-05. p. 13..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em
^ Pearson, Neil (2007). Obelisk: A History of Jack Kahane and the Obelisk Press. Liverpool University Press. pp. 79–81. ISBN 978-1-84631-101-7.
^ Graham-Dixon, Andrew (11 May 2003). "Rude awakening". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
^ Batson, Benjamin A. "Kulab Saipradit and the War of Life" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2013-06-29. Retrieved 2013-06-21.
^ The Times, 3 October 1929.
^ In his "Introduction" to The Best Detective Stories of 1928–1929.
^ Birmingham, Kevin (2014). The most dangerous book: the battle for James Joyce's Ulysses. London: Head of Zeus. ISBN 9781784080723.
^ Leavis, Q. D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (rev. ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
^ Anderson, Douglas A. Introduction to Cold Spring Press edition of The Dark Chamber.