1936 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1936.
  | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Events
    

- January 8 – Jewish booksellers throughout Nazi Germany are deprived of their Reich Publications Chamber membership cards, without which no one can sell books.[2]
 - May – The Greek poet and Communist activist Yiannis Ritsos is inspired to write his poem Epitaphios by a photograph of a dead protester at a massive tobacco workers' demonstration in Thessaloniki. It is published soon after. In August, the right-wing dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas comes to power in Greece and copies are burned publicly at the foot of the Acropolis in Athens.[3]
 - May 16–17 – About 30 left-wing writers of the Second Polish Republic gather at the Lviv Anti-Fascist Congress of Cultural Workers.
 - August 3 – George Heywood Hill establishes the Heywood Hill bookshop in London's Mayfair.
 - August 18 – The 38-year-old Spanish dramatist, Federico García Lorca, is arrested by Francoist militia during the White Terror and never seen alive again. His brother-in-law, Manuel Fernández-Montesinos, the leftist mayor of Granada, is shot on the same day.[4][5] Lorca's play The House of Bernarda Alba (La casa de Bernarda Alba), completed on June 19, will not be performed until 1945.
 - November 6 – After United States publication in 1934, the U.K. authorities decide they will not prosecute or seize copies of James Joyce's 1922 novel Ulysses.[6]
 - November 23 – Life magazine begins to appear as a weekly news magazine in the United States, under the management of Henry Luce.
 - unknown dates
- The first lighthearted crime novel by Scottish-born university teacher of English literature J. I. M. Stewart, writing as Michael Innes, is published: Death at the President's Lodging, set in Oxford. It introduces his long-running character Detective Inspector John Appleby of Scotland Yard.[7]
 - The Carnegie Medal for excellence in children's literature is inaugurated by the Library Association in the United Kingdom. The first winner is Arthur Ransome for Pigeon Post.[8]
 
 
New books
    
    Fiction
    
- Felipe Alfau – Locos: A Comedy of Gestures
 - Sutan Takdir Alisjahbana – Layar Terkembang (With Sails Unfurled)
 - Jorge Amado – Sea of Death (Mar Morto)
 - Eric Ambler – The Dark Frontier[7]
 - Arturo Ambrogi – El Jetón
 - Nigel Balchin – Lightbody on Liberty
 - Djuna Barnes – Nightwood
 - Henry Bellamann – The Gray Man Walks
 - Stephen Vincent Benét – "The Devil and Daniel Webster" (short story, published in The Saturday Evening Post)
 - Georges Bernanos – The Diary of a Country Priest
 - Arna Bontemps – Black Thunder
 - Mary Borden - Action for Slander
 - Marjorie Bowen – The Poisoners
 - Carol Ryrie Brink – Caddie Woodlawn
 - John Bude – The Sussex Downs Murder
 - Edgar Rice Burroughs – Tarzan's Quest
 - James M. Cain – Double Indemnity
 - Morley Callaghan – Now that April's Here and Other Stories
 - Karel Čapek – War with the Newts (Válka s mloky)
 - John Dickson Carr
- The Arabian Nights Murder
 - The Punch and Judy Murders (as by Carter Dickson)
 
 - Willa Cather – Not Under Forty
 - Louis-Ferdinand Céline – Death on the Installment Plan (Mort à crédit)
 - Peter Cheyney – This Man Is Dangerous[9]
 - Agatha Christie – Hercule Poirot novels
 - Robert P. Tristram Coffin – John Dawn
 - Freeman Wills Crofts
 - Carmen de Icaza – Cristina Guzmán
 - Henry de Montherlant – Les Jeunes Filles (The Young Girls; first part of tetralogy)
 - John Dos Passos – The Big Money
 - William Pène du Bois – Otto at Sea
 - Daphne du Maurier – Jamaica Inn
 - Walter D. Edmonds – Drums Along the Mohawk
 - Mircea Eliade – Miss Christina (Domnișoara Christina)
 - William Faulkner – Absalom, Absalom!
 - Gilbert Frankau – Farewell Romance
 - Konstantine Gamsakhurdia – Stealing the Moon (Georgian: მთვარის მოტაცება, romanized: mtvaris mot'atseba)
 - Anthony Gilbert – Murder by Experts
 - Jean Giono – Joy of Man's Desiring (Que ma joie demeure)
 - Maxim Gorky (posthumous) – The Life of Klim Samgin (the final fourth volume, unfinishes, translated as The Specter)
 - Graham Greene – A Gun for Sale
 - Walter Greenwood – Standing Room Only
 - Winifred Holtby – South Riding
 - Aldous Huxley – Eyeless in Gaza
 - Michael Innes – Death at the President's Lodging
 - C. L. R. James – Minty Alley
 - Mikheil Javakhishvili – A Woman's Burden (Georgian: ქალის ტვირთი, Qalis tvirti)
 - Storm Jameson
- None Turn Back (The Mirror in Darkness III)
 - In the Second Year
 
 - Arthur Joseph – Dark Metropolis
 - Margaret Kennedy – Together and Apart
 - Leo Kiacheli – Gvadi Bigva
 - Jonathan Latimer – The Lady in the Morgue
 - Jean de La Varende – Leather-Nose (Nez-de-Cuir)
 - Alexander Lernet-Holenia – Baron Bagge (Der Baron Bagge)
 - Haniel Long – Interlinear to Cabeza de Vaca
 - E.C.R. Lorac
 - Andrew Lytle – The Long Night
 - Compton Mackenzie – Figure of Eight
 - Klaus Mann – Mephisto
 - Ngaio Marsh – Death in Ecstasy
 - A. E. W. Mason – Fire Over England[10]
 - Alan Melville – Death of Anton
 - Henry Miller – Black Spring
 - Gladys Mitchell – Dead Men's Morris
 - Margaret Mitchell – Gone with the Wind
 - Naomi Mitchison – The Fourth Pig
 - John A. Moroso – Nobody's Buddy
 - Anaïs Nin – House of Incest
 - George Orwell – Keep the Aspidistra Flying
 - John Cowper Powys – Maiden Castle
 - Premchand – Godaan (Hindi: गोदान, Gōdān, The Gift of a Cow)
 - Ellery Queen – Halfway House
 - Ayn Rand – We the Living
 - Erich Maria Remarque – Three Comrades (Drei Kameraden)
 - Kate Roberts – Traed mewn cyffion (Feet in the Stocks)
 - Rafael Sabatini – The Fortunes of Captain Blood
 - Sim Hun – Sangnoksu (Korean: 상록수; Hanja: 常綠樹; "Evergreen (Tree)"; serialization concludes and book publication)
 - Israel Joshua Singer – The Brothers Ashkenazi (Di brider Ashkenazy, in book format)
 - Eleanor Smith – Portrait of a Lady
 - John Steinbeck – In Dubious Battle
 - Rex Stout – The Rubber Band
 - Cecil Street
 - Phoebe Atwood Taylor
 - Frank Thiess – Tsushima
 - Aleksey Tolstoy – «Золотой ключик, или Приключения Буратино» (The Golden Key, or The Adventures of Buratino)
 - S. S. Van Dine – The Kidnap Murder Case
 - Vũ Trọng Phụng – Số đỏ (Dumb Luck)
 - Henry Wade – Bury Him Darkly
 - Sylvia Townsend Warner – Summer Will Show
 - Carolyn Wells – Murder in the Bookshop
 - Ethel Lina White – The Wheel Spins (later The Lady Vanishes)
 - Francis Brett Young – Far Forest
 
Children and young people
    
- Edward Ardizzone – Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain (Journal d'un curé de campagne)
 - M. E. Atkinson – August Adventure
 - Carol Ryrie Brink – Caddie Woodlawn
 - Joanna Cannan – A Pony for Jean (first of nine Pony series books)
 - Noel Langley – The Tale of the Land of Green Ginger
 - Munro Leaf – The Story of Ferdinand
 - John A. Moroso – Nobody's Buddy
 - Carola Oman – Ferry the Fearless
 - Arthur Ransome – Pigeon Post
 - Ruth Sawyer – Roller Skates
 - Lester Basil Sinclair (as John Mystery) – Why Cows Moo
 - Noel Streatfeild – Ballet Shoes (illustrated by Ruth Gervis)
 - Barbara Euphan Todd – Worzel Gummidge (first in the Worzel Gummidge series of eleven books)
 - Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy – The Golden Key, or the Adventures of Buratino
 
Drama
    
- Pralhad Keshav Atre
- Lagnāchi Bedi
 - Udyāchā Sansār
 
 - W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood – The Ascent of F6
 - S. N. Behrman – End of Summer
 - Charles Bennett – Page From a Diary
 - Bertolt Brecht – Round Heads and Pointed Heads (Die Rundköpfe und die Spitzköpfe)
 - Noël Coward
 - Mazo de la Roche and Nancy Price – Whiteoaks
 - Henry de Montherlant – Pasiphaé
 - Harley Granville-Barker – Waste (first public performance, 1927 version; originally written 1906)
 - Ian Hay – The Frog
 - George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart – You Can't Take It with You
 - Sinclair Lewis and John C. Moffitt – It Can't Happen Here (dramatisation)
 - Federico García Lorca – The House of Bernarda Alba (La casa de Bernarda Alba; written)
 - Clare Boothe Luce – The Women
 - Barré Lyndon – The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse
 - J.B. Priestley – Bees on the Boat Deck
 - Terence Rattigan – French Without Tears
 - Irwin Shaw – Bury the Dead
 - Ödön von Horváth
- Don Juan kommt aus dem Krieg (Don Juan Comes Back From the War)
 - Figaro läßt sich scheiden (Figaro Gets a Divorce)
 
 
Poetry
    
- W. H. Auden – Look, Stranger![11]
 - Gottfried Benn – Ausgewählte Gedichte (Selected Poems)
 - T. S. Eliot – Collected Poems 1909–35[11] including "Burnt Norton", first of the Four Quartets
 - Patrick Kavanagh – Ploughman, and Other Poems
 - Michael Roberts (ed.) – The Faber Book of Modern Verse
 - Dylan Thomas – Twenty-five Poems[11]
 - W. B. Yeats (ed.) – The Oxford Book of Modern Verse 1892–1935
 
Non-fiction
    
- A. J. Ayer – Language, Truth, and Logic
 - John Dickson Carr – The Murder of Sir Edmund Godfrey
 - Victor Hugo Green – The Negro Motorist Green Book (1st edn)
 - Graham Greene – Journey Without Maps
 - Richard Foster Jones – Ancients and Moderns: A Study of the Background of The Battle of the Books
 - Carl Gustav Jung – The Idea of Redemption in Alchemy (Die Erlösungsvorstellungen in der Alchemie)
 - John Maynard Keynes – The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
 - Osbert Lancaster – Progress at Pelvis Bay
 - F. R. Leavis – Revaluation: Tradition and Development in English Poetry
 - C. S. Lewis – The Allegory of Love
 - Karl Mannheim – Ideology and Utopia
 - Edwin Muir – Scott and Scotland
 - George Orwell – "Bookshop Memories"
 - Olavi Paavolainen – Kolmannen valtakunnan vieraana (Guest of the Third Reich)
 - J. R. R. Tolkien – "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics" (version of a lecture)
 
Births
    
- January 5 – Florence King, American writer (died 2016)
 - January 10 – Stephen E. Ambrose, American historian (died 2002)
 - January 28 – Ismail Kadare, Albanian novelist and poet
 - February 12 – Shawkat Ali, Bangladeshi writer (died 2018)
 - February 18 – Jean M. Auel, American historical novelist
 - March 1 – Jean-René Huguenin, French novelist and literary critic (died in 1962)
 - March 7 – Georges Perec, French novelist, filmmaker and essayist (died 1982)
 - March 28 – Peter Mayer, English-born publisher (died 2018)
 - March 31 – Marge Piercy, American poet and activist
 - April 30 – Viktor Likhonosov, Soviet Russian writer and editor
 - May 10 – Anthea Bell, English translator (died 2018)
 - May 23 – Ian Kennedy Martin, English scriptwriter and novelist
 - May 27 – Ivo Brešan, Croatian playwright, novelist, screenwriter and satirist (died 2016)
 - June 3
- Duff Hart-Davis, English biographer and journalist
 - Larry McMurtry, American novelist, essayist and screenwriter (died 2021)
 
 - June 9 – Nell Dunn, English playwright and author
 - June 18 – Dick Wimmer, American novelist (died 2011)
 - June 23 – Richard Bach, American novelist and non-fiction writer
 - June 24 – J. H. Prynne, English poet
 - June 29 – David Rudkin, English playwright
 - July 5 – Valerie Flint, English medieval historian (died 2009)
 - July 6 – Abidullah Ghazi, Indian-American author, educator and poet
 - July 22 – Tom Robbins, American novelist
 - August 8 – Jan Pieńkowski, Polish-born British children's writer and illustrator (died 2022)
 - August 24 – A. S. Byatt, English novelist
 - September 1 – Roderick Thorp, American novelist (died 1999)
 - September 2 – Károly Krajczár, Hungarian Slovene teacher, writer and collector (died 2018)
 - September 20 – Andrew Davies, Welsh novelist and screenwriter
 - September 26 – Victor Watson, English children's writer and academic
 - October 1 – Kailayar Sellanainar Sivakumaran, Sri Lankan writer, art and literary critic, journalist and radio and TV personality
 - October 5 – Václav Havel, Czech dramatist and first president of Czech Republic (died 2011)
 - November 4 – C. K. Williams, American poet (died 2015)
 - November 17 – John Wells, English satirical writer and actor (died 1998)
 - November 18 – Suzette Haden Elgin, American science fiction writer (died 2015)[12]
 - November 20 – Don DeLillo, American novelist
 - November 25 – William McIlvanney, Scottish novelist, short story writer and poet (died 2015)
 - November 27 – Dahlia Ravikovitch, Israeli poet (died 2005)
 - December 1 – Ma Văn Kháng, Vietnamese writer
 - December 2 – Hebe Uhart, Argentine writer (died 2018)
 - December 5
- James Lee Burke, American writer
 - Lewis Nkosi, Zulu writer (died 2010)
 
 - December 11 – Ingvar Moe, Norwegian poet, novelist and children's writer (died 1993)
 - December 17 – Frank Martinus Arion, Curaçaoan novelist and poet (died 2015)
 
Deaths
    
- January 4 – James Churchward, British writer (born 1851)
 - January 5 – Ramón del Valle-Inclán, Spanish dramatist and novelist (born 1866)
 - January 17 – Mateiu Caragiale, Romanian novelist and poet (stroke, born 1885)
 - January 18 – Rudyard Kipling, English writer and Nobel laureate (born 1865)
 - February 7 – Elizabeth Robins Pennell, American biographer and critic based in London (born 1855)
 - February 8 – Rahel Sanzara, German dancer, actress and novelist (cancer, born 1894)
 - February 23 – Lidia Veselitskaya (V. Mikulich), Russian novelist, memoirist and translator (born 1857)
 - March 1 – Mikhail Kuzmin, Russian poet, musician and novelist (born 1872)
 - March 9 – A. de Herz, Romanian playwright and journalist (hemoptysis, born 1887)
 - March 16 – Marguerite Durand, French actress and journalist (born 1864)
 - April 30 – A. E. Housman, English poet (born 1859)
 - June 11 – Robert E. Howard, American fantasy writer (suicide, born 1906)
 - June 12 – M. R. James, English ghost story writer and scholar (born 1862)
 - June 14
- G. K. Chesterton, English novelist, poet and Catholic apologist (born 1874)
 - Maxim Gorky, Russian dramatist (born 1868)
 
 - July 25 – Donald Maxwell, English travel writer and illustrator (born 1877)
 - July 26 – F. J. Harvey Darton English children's literature historian and publisher (born 1878)
 - August 8 – Mourning Dove, Native American writer (born 1884)
 - August 15 – Grazia Deledda, Sardinian-born novelist and Nobel laureate (born 1871)
 - August 19 – Federico García Lorca, Spanish dramatist and poet (shot, born 1898)
 - August 26 – Juliette Adam, French author (born 1836)[13]
 - November 4 – Annie Ryder Gracey, American writer and missionary (died 1908)
 - October 5 – J. Slauerhoff, Dutch poet and novelist (born 1898)
 - November 12 – Stefan Grabiński, Polish horror writer (born 1887)
 - December 10 – Luigi Pirandello, Italian dramatist and novelist (born 1867)
 - December 24 – Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley, English horticulturist and garden writer (born 1872)
 - December 27 – Kristína Royová, Slovak novelist, religious writer and poet (born 1860)
 - December 28 – John Cornford, English poet (killed in action, born 1915)[14]
 - December 31 – Miguel de Unamuno, Spanish novelist, poet and scholar (born 1864)
 
Awards
    
- Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Arthur Ransome, Pigeon Post
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Winifred Holtby, South Riding
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Edward Sackville West, A Flame in Sunlight: The Life and Work of Thomas de Quincey
 - Newbery Medal for children's literature: Carol Ryrie Brink, Caddie Woodlawn
 - Nobel Prize in literature: Eugene Gladstone O'Neill
 - Prix Goncourt: Maxence Van Der Meersch, L'Empreinte de Dieu[15]
 - Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Robert E. Sherwood, Idiot's Delight
 - Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Robert P. Tristram Coffin, Strange Holiness
 - Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: Harold L. Davis, Honey in the Horn
 
References
    
- Gibson, Ian (1992). Lorca's Granada. ISBN 0-571-16489-7.
 - Schultz, Sigrid (1936-01-09). "Beef Shortage Drives Germany to Frozen Meat". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 13.
 - Baker, Kenneth (2016). On the Burning of Books. London: Unicorn. pp. 66–68. ISBN 978-1-910787-11-3.
 - Gibson, Ian (1983). The Assassination of Federico García Lorca. London: Penguin Books. p. 164.
 - Gibson, Ian (1996). El assasinato de García Lorca (in Spanish). Barcelona: Plaza and Janes. p. 255. ISBN 978-84-663-1314-8.
 - Birmingham, Kevin (2014). The most dangerous book: the battle for James Joyce's Ulysses. London: Head of Zeus. ISBN 9781784080723.
 - Keating, H. R. F. (1982). Whodunit? – a guide to crime, suspense and spy fiction. London: Windward. ISBN 0-7112-0249-4.
 - The Bookseller. J. Whitaker. 1957. p. 1964.
 - Sutherland, John (2007). Bestsellers: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-19-921489-1.
 - Library of Congress. Copyright Office (1936). Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 1. [A] Group 1. Books. New Series. p. 1171.
 - Cox, Michael, ed. (2004). The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860634-6.
 - "Authors : Elgin, Suzette Haden : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia". www.sf-encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
 - Crecelius, Kathryn J.; Offen, Karen (1991). "Juliette Adam". In Wilson, Katharina M. (ed.). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers Volume 1. New York: Garland. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-82408-547-6.
 - Haycock, David Boyd (2012). I Am Spain. Brecon. pp. 143–44.
 - The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies by a Number of Scholars. CUP Archive. p. 119.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.