1934 in literature
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1934.
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 7 – The first Flash Gordon comic strip is published in the United States.
January 25 – Following its acquittal the previous month in United States v. One Book Called Ulysses, James Joyce's novel Ulysses is first published in an authorized edition in the Anglophone world by Random House of New York. It has 12,000 advance sales.[1]
- January – B. Traven's novel The Death Ship (1926) is first published in English.
- February – Stefan Zweig flees Austria and settles in London.
February 6 – The February 6 riots in France, partly provoked by a performance of Shakespeare's Coriolanus by the Comédie-Française; they will become the focus of a cult in the works far-right authors, notably Death on Credit by Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1936) and Gilles by Pierre Drieu La Rochelle (1939); also in 1934, Drieu announces his conversion to fascism, with the essay Socialisme fasciste.[2]
March 16 & October 5 – P. G. Wodehouse's Thank You, Jeeves and Right Ho, Jeeves, the first Jeeves stories written as full-length novels, are published.- April – F. Scott Fitzgerald's fourth and final completed novel, Tender Is the Night, is published in book form in New York on conclusion of its serialization in the monthly Scribner's Magazine (since January).
April 3 – English literary biographer Thomas Wright (of Olney) first publishes some facts concerning Charles Dickens' relationship with the actress Ellen Ternan (writing in the Daily Express).[3]
April 6 – Rudyard Kipling and W. B. Yeats are awarded the Gothenburg Prize for Poetry.
May 1 – The first officially designated Thingplatz for the performance of Thingspiele is dedicated in the Brandberge in Halle (Nazi Germany).[4]
- June
- A medieval manuscript of Le Morte d'Arthur used by Caxton is identified in the Fellows' Library of Winchester College (England) by schoolmaster and bibliophile Walter Fraser Oakeshott.[5]
- English poet Laurie Lee walks out one midsummer morning from his Gloucestershire home bound for Spain.
- A medieval manuscript of Le Morte d'Arthur used by Caxton is identified in the Fellows' Library of Winchester College (England) by schoolmaster and bibliophile Walter Fraser Oakeshott.[5]
July 17 – Circular Manchester Central Library, England, opened.- August – Boris Pasternak and Korney Chukovsky are among those present at the first Congress of the Soviet Union of Writers.
- September – Henry Miller's novel Tropic of Cancer is published in Paris by the Obelisk Press; the United States Customs Service prohibits its import into the United States.[6]
October 24 – The first of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe detective novels, Fer-de-Lance, is published in New York (and also abridged in The American Magazine for November under the title "Point of Death.")
November 20 – Lillian Hellman's first successful play, The Children's Hour, with a theme of accusations of lesbianism, is premiered at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on Broadway in New York where it will run for 2 years.
December 25 – Romanian novelist Panait Istrati, formerly a communist, begins his collaboration with the quasi-fascist Cruciada Românismului, with a polemic against antisemitism.[7] The weekly newspaper, edited by Mihai Stelescu and Alexandru Talex, later hosts pieces by Constantin Virgil Gheorghiu.[8]
- Two notable gentleman detective series characters of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction set in England are introduced:
- The first book featuring Inspector Roderick Alleyn of Scotland Yard, A Man Lay Dead, is published by Ngaio Marsh (at this time resident in her native New Zealand) in London.
- The first Sir Henry Merrivale locked room mystery, The Plague Court Murders, is published by John Dickson Carr (at this time resident in England) writing as "Carter Dickson" in New York around early June, followed in December by The White Priory Murders.
- The first three volumes of Mikhail Sholokhov's novel And Quiet Flows the Don are first published in English under this title.
New books
Fiction
M. Ageyev – Cocain Romance (Roman s kokainom)
Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie – After Worlds Collide
Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay – Pother Kanta
Samuel Beckett – More Pricks Than Kicks
James Branch Cabell – Smirt
James M. Cain – The Postman Always Rings Twice
Morley Callaghan – Such Is My Beloved
John Dickson Carr
- The Blind Barber
- The Eight of Swords
The Bowstring Murders (as Carr Dickson/Carter Dickson)
The Plague Court Murders (as Carter Dickson)
The White Priory Murders (as Carter Dickson)
Devil Kinsmere (as Roger Fairbairn)
Gabriel Chevallier – Clochemerle
Agatha Christie
- Murder on the Orient Express
- Why Didn't They Ask Evans?
- The Listerdale Mystery
- Parker Pyne Investigates
Unfinished Portrait (as Mary Westmacott)
Colette – Duo
Freeman Wills Crofts – The 12.30 from Croydon
Isak Dinesen – Seven Gothic Tales
Pierre Drieu La Rochelle – The Comedy of Charleroi (La Comédie de Charleroi, linked short stories)
Max Ernst – Une semaine de bonté (A Week of Kindness, graphic novel)
F. Scott Fitzgerald – Tender Is the Night
Carlo Emilio Gadda – Il castello di Udine
Jeanne Galzy – Jeunes Filles en serre chaude (Young girls in a greenhouse)
Jean Giono – The Song of the World
Robert Graves – I, Claudius
Graham Greene – It's a Battlefield
Hergé – Cigars of the Pharaoh (Les Cigares du pharaon)
Harold Heslop
- The Crime of Peter Ropner
Goaf (English version)
James Hilton – Goodbye, Mr. Chips
Zora Neale Hurston – Jonah's Gourd Vine: A Novel
F. Tennyson Jesse – A Pin to See the Peepshow
D. Gwenallt Jones – Plasau'r Brenin
John Knittel – Via Mala
Halldór Laxness – Independent People (Sjálfstætt fólk) — Part I, Icelandic Pioneers (Landnámsmaður Íslands)
Henry Miller – Tropic of Cancer
Leopold Myers – Rajah Amar
Vladimir Nabokov – Despair
- Carolina Nabuco – A Sucessora
John O'Hara – Appointment in Samarra
George Orwell – Burmese Days
John Cowper Powys
- Autobiography
- Weymouth Sands
Ellery Queen – The Chinese Orange Mystery
Henry Roth – Call It Sleep
Rafael Sabatini – Venetian Masque
Dorothy L. Sayers – The Nine Tailors
Bruno Schulz – The Street of Crocodiles (short stories, Sklepy cynamonowe – Cinnamon Shops – in December 1933, dated 1934)
Mihail Sebastian – De două mii de ani (For Two Thousand Years)
J. Slauerhoff – Het leven op aarde (Life on Earth)
Irving Stone – Lust for Life
Ruth Suckow - The Folks
Rex Stout – Fer-de-Lance
Phoebe Atwood Taylor
- The Mystery of the Cape Cod Tavern
- Sandbar Sinister
Thomas F. Tweed – Blind Mouths
S. S. Van Dine
- The Dragon Murder Case
- The Casino Murder Case
Simon Vestdijk – Terug tot Ina Damman (Return to Ina Damman, first published of the Anton Wachter cycle)
Evelyn Waugh – A Handful of Dust
Nathanael West – A Cool Million
Dennis Wheatley – The Devil Rides Out
Dorothy Whipple – They Knew Mr. Knight
P. G. Wodehouse
- Thank You, Jeeves
- Right Ho, Jeeves
S. Fowler Wright
- David
- Prelude in Prague: The War of 1938
Who Else But She? (as Sydney Fowler)
V. M. Yeates – Winged Victory
Marguerite Yourcenar – A Coin in Nine Hands (Denier du rêve)
Children and young people
Edgar Rice Burroughs – Tarzan and the Lion Man
Elena Fortún – Celia en el mundo (Celia in the World)- Capt. W. E. Johns – Biggles of the Camel Squadron
Lorna Lewis – The Little French Poodle
Constantin S. Nicolăescu-Plopșor – Paramiseà romanè (anthology)
Arthur Ransome – Coot Club
Hilda van Stockum – A Day on Skates
William Woodthorpe Tarn – The Treasure of the Isle of Mist
P. L. Travers – Mary Poppins (first in Mary Poppins series of eight books)
Geoffrey Trease – Bows Against the Barons
Drama
Tawfiq al-Hakim – Shahrazad (Scheherazade)
Jean Cocteau – The Infernal Machine
Federico García Lorca – Yerma
Lillian Hellman – The Children's Hour
Frederick J. Jackson – The Bishop Misbehaves
Pär Lagerkvist – Bödeln (The Hangman; dramatization)
Eberhard Wolfgang Möller – Rothschild siegt bei Waterloo
Ayn Rand – Night of January 16th (first performed as Woman on Trial)
Lawrence Riley – Personal Appearance
Dodie Smith - Touch Wood
- Paul Vulpius (Ladislas Fodor and Hans Adler) – Youth at the Helm
Poetry
Constantin S. Nicolăescu-Plopșor – Ghileà romanè (anthology)
Dylan Thomas – 18 Poems
Non-fiction
Ruth Benedict – Patterns of Culture
Maud Bodkin – Archetypal Patterns of Poetry: Psychological Studies of Imagination
Martí de Riquer i Morera
- L'humanisme català (1388–1494)
- Humanisme i decadència en les lletres catalanes
Pierre Drieu La Rochelle – Socialisme fasciste (Fascist Socialism)
Daphne du Maurier – Gerald: A Portrait
Julius Evola – Il Mistero del Graal e la Tradizione Ghibellina dell'Impero (The Mystery of the Grail)
Emma Goldman – Living My Life
Aldous Huxley – Beyond the Mexique Bay
Nicolae Iorga
- Byzance après Byzance
- Histoire de la vie byzantine
- Orizonturile mele. O viață de om așa cum a fost
Hugh Kingsmill – The Sentimental Journey: A Life of Charles Dickens[3]
Cornelia Meigs – Invincible Louisa: The Story of the Author of Little Women
A. A. Milne – Peace with Honour
Karl Popper – The Logic of Scientific Discovery
J. B. Priestley – English Journey[9]
Amber Reeves – The Nationalisation of Banking
Antal Szerb – A magyar irodalom története (History of Hungarian literature)
H. G. Wells – An Experiment in Autobiography
Births
January 12 – Alan Sharp, Scottish-American screenwriter and author (died 2013)[10]
February 10
Fleur Adcock, New Zealand-born poet
Gordon Lish, American writer, editor and teacher
February 18 – Audre Lorde, American poet, writer and feminist (died 1992)
February 27 – N. Scott Momaday, Native American novelist
March 28 – Jean Louvet, Belgian dramatist
April 24 – Jayakanthan, Tamil writer, Jnanpith awardee (died 2015)
May 10 – Richard Peck, American novelist (died 2015)
May 12 – Elechi Amadi, Nigerian novelist (died 2016)
May 27 – Harlan Ellison, American science fiction writer
June 11 – Lady Annabel Goldsmith, English memoirist and socialite
July 11 – Helen Cresswell, English children's writer and scriptwriter (died 2005)
July 13 – Wole Soyinka, Nigerian writer, playwright and Nobel laureate
July 21 – Jonathan Miller, English satirist and non-fiction author
August 5 – Wendell Berry, American poet, novelist, and activist
August 6
Piers Anthony, English science fiction and fantasy writer
Diane di Prima, American poet of the Beat Generation and artist
August 16 – Diana Wynne Jones, English children's fantasy novelist (died 2011)
September 11 – Leon Rooke, Canadian novelist
September 21 – Leonard Cohen, Canadian-born poet, singer-songwriter and novelist (died 2016)
September 23 – Per Olov Enquist, Swedish novelist
October 1 – Shakeb Jalali, Pakistani poet in Urdu (suicide 1966)
October 17 – Alan Garner, English children's novelist
October 24 – Adrian Mitchell, English poet, playwright and children's author (died 2008)
November 9 – Ronald Harwood (Ronald Horwitz), South African-born English dramatist and screenwriter
November 12 – John McGahern, Irish novelist (died 2006)
November 19 – Joanne Kyger, American poet
November 21 – Beryl Bainbridge, English novelist (died 2010)
December 28 – Alasdair Gray, Scottish novelist and artist
Unknown dates
Muhammad al-Maghut, Syrian Ismaili poet (died 2006)
Yaakov Shabtai, Israeli novelist, playwright, and translator (died 1981)
Deaths
January 1 – Jakob Wassermann, German-Jewish novelist (born 1873)
January 6 – Dorothy Edwards, Welsh novelist (suicide, born 1903)
January 8 – Andrei Bely (Boris Nikolaevich Bugaev), Russian novelist, poet and critic (born 1880)
January 11 – Helen Zimmern, German-born English writer and translator (born 1846)
January 15 – Hermann Bahr, Austrian dramatist and critic (born 1863)
February 8 – Ferenc Móra, Hungarian novelist and journalist (born 1879)
March 10 – Thomas Anstey Guthrie (F. Anstey), English comic novelist and journalist (born 1856)
April 9 – Safvet-beg Bašagić, Bosnian poet (born 1870)
April 12 – Robert Clyde Packer, Australian journalist and newspaper magnate (heart failure, born 1879)
May 1 – Paul Zarifopol, Romanian critic (born 1874)
June 14 – John Gray, English poet (born 1866)
June 21 – Thorne Smith, American humorist and fantasy author (heart attack, born 1892)
June 26 – Naito Torajiro (内藤 虎次郎), Japanese historian (born 1866)
June 30 – Night of the Long Knives
Fritz Gerlich, German journalist (murdered, born 1883)
Karl-Günther Heimsoth, Austrian doctor and gay publicist (shot, born 1899)
Willi Schmid, German music critic (murdered, born 1893)[11]
July 4 – Hayim Nahman Bialik, Hebrew-language poet (born 1873)
July 21 – Julian Hawthorne, American journalist and novelist (born 1846)
July 23 – Karl Joel, German philosopher (born 1864)
July 29 – Frane Bulić, Croatian historian (born 1846)
August 13 – Mary Hunter Austin, American travel writer (born 1868)
September 9 – Roger Fry, English art critic (born 1866)
September 21 – Gheorghe Bogdan-Duică, Romanian literary critic (born 1866)
November 23 – Arthur Wing Pinero, English dramatist (born 1855)
December 15 – Gustave Lanson, French historian and literary critic (born 1857)
December 26 – Wallace Thurman, African American novelist (TB, born 1902)
Awards
James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Robert Graves, I, Claudius and Claudius the God
James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: J. E. Neale, Queen Elizabeth
King's Gold Medal for Poetry instituted this year with first winner, Laurence Whistler
Newbery Medal for children's literature: Cornelia Meigs, Invincible Louisa
Nobel Prize for literature: Luigi Pirandello.
Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Sidney Kingsley, Men in White
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Robert Hillyer: Collected Verse
Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: Caroline Miller – Lamb in His Bosom
References
^ Birmingham, Kevin (2014). The Most Dangerous Book: The Battle for James Joyce's Ulysses. London: Head of Zeus. ISBN 9781784080723..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background: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 .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background: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 .cs1-lock-subscription a{background: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-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
^ Kaplan, Alice Y. (1986). Reproductions of Banality. Fascism, Literature, and French Intellectual Life. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 68, 102, 105–106, 117. ISBN 0-8166-1495-4.
^ ab Schlicke, Paul, ed. (2011). The Oxford Companion to Charles Dickens (Anniversary ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-964018-8.
^ Stommer, Rainer (1985). Die inszenierte Volksgemeinschaft: die "Thing-Bewegung" im Dritten Reich. Marburg: Jonas. ISBN 9783922561316.
^ Oakeshott, Walter F. (1963). "The Finding of the Manuscript". In Bennett, J. A. W. Essays on Malory. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 1–6.
^ "Books: Greatest Living Patagonian". Time. 1961-06-09. Retrieved 2011-09-25.
^ Ornea, Z. (1999). "Cum a devenit Istrati scriitor". România Literară (in Romanian) (22).
^ Durnea, Victor (2015). "Constantin Virgil Gheorghiu – o ucenicie îndelungată". Cultura (in Romanian) (506).
^ Marr, Andrew (2008). A History of Modern Britain. Macmillan. p. xxii. ISBN 978-0-330-43983-1.
^ Bergan, Ronald (14 February 2013). "Alan Sharp obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
^ Hughes, Matthew; Mann, Chris (2002). Inside Hitler's Germany: Life Under the Third Reich. Brassey's. p. 98. ISBN 1-57488-503-0.