1939 in literature
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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1939.
Events
[edit]- Early – The Pocket Books mass-market paperback imprint is launched in the United States. The first of the nationally distributed titles is James Hilton's Lost Horizon.
- January
- American literary magazine The Kenyon Review is founded and edited by John Crowe Ransom.[1]
- The American pulp science fiction magazine Startling Stories appears, edited by Mort Weisinger. It includes The Black Flame by Stanley G. Weinbaum as lead novel.
- Eando Binder's story "I, Robot" appears in the U.S. science fiction magazine Amazing Stories.[2]
- The Criterion, a British literary quarterly, is founded and edited by T. S. Eliot.[3]
- W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood set sail from England for the United States.
- January/February – Poetry London: a Bi-Monthly of Modern Verse and Criticism, founded and edited by Tambimuttu (with Dylan Thomas and others), is first published.
- February 6 – Raymond Chandler's California private detective Philip Marlowe is introduced in his first full-length work of crime fiction, The Big Sleep, which reworks elements from earlier short stories. It is published by Alfred A. Knopf in the United States.[4]
- March – Isaac Asimov's first published short story, "Marooned off Vesta", appears in Astounding Science-Fiction magazine.
- March 4 – BBC Television broadcasts one of the first specially written television plays, Condemned To Be Shot by R. E. J. Brooke (perhaps the actor Reginald Brooke), live from its London studios at Alexandra Palace. The production notably uses a camera as the first-person view by the play's unseen central character.
- March 31 – 20th Century Fox releases a film version of The Hound of the Baskervilles, first of a Sherlock Holmes film series starring Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes and Nigel Bruce as Dr Watson.
- April 13 – The United Artists film version of Wuthering Heights, starring Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier, is released.
- May – Jorge Luis Borges' first short story in his later characteristic style, "Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote", is published in the Buenos Aires literary magazine Sur.
- May 4 – James Joyce's last work, Finnegans Wake, is published in full by Faber and Faber in London.
- May 15 – Russian writer Isaac Babel is arrested by the NKVD at his dacha as part of the Great Purge in the Soviet Union, and incarcerated in the Lubyanka Building in Moscow.
- c. August – Ernest Vincent Wright publishes his lipogrammatic novel Gadsby, "a story of over 50,000 words without using the letter 'E'", in Los Angeles a few months before his death on October 7.
- August
- Mikhail Bulgakov, while secretly working on The Master and Margarita, prepares the propaganda play Batumi, to romanticize events in Joseph Stalin's youth. The project is shelved by Stalin himself once Bulgakov announces he will interview witnesses personally.[5]
- Robert A. Heinlein's first published short story, "Life-Line", appears in Astounding Science-Fiction.
- Before September – After a pledge drive led by Renaud de Jouvenel and Lucien Lévy-Bruhl, the Romanian poet Benjamin Fondane is naturalized French and in September conscripted into the French Army, to serve in the Phony War.[6]
- September 2 – Jean-Paul Sartre is conscripted into the French Army, where he will serve as a meteorologist.
- September 3 – Yorkshire-born novelist and playwright J. B. Priestley reads the first installment of his novel Let the People Sing, a celebration of local democracy specially written for radio, on BBC Home Service radio in the UK, the day war is declared.[7]
- September 18 – The Polish painter, playwright and novelist Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (born 1885) commits suicide after the Soviet invasion of Poland.
- September/October – Famous Fantastic Mysteries, a pulp magazine reprinting American science fiction and fantasy, begins publication in New York.
- Fall – Frank Herbert lies about his age to get his first job as a local newspaper reporter.
- November – The teenage Brendan Behan is arrested in Liverpool for possessing explosives.
- November 8 – Lindsay and Crouse's stage adaptation of Clarence Day's Life with Father opens at the Empire Theatre (42nd Street) in New York. Running until 12 July 1947, it becomes the all-time longest-running non-musical play in Broadway theatre.[8]
- November/December – Captain Marvel makes his first appearance, in Whiz Comics #2 (cover date February 1940).
New books
[edit]bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawntoohoohoordenenthurnuk!
—From Finnegans Wake
Fiction
[edit]- Eric Ambler – The Mask of Dimitrios[9]
- Sholem Asch – The Nazarene
- William Attaway – Let Me Breathe Thunder
- H. E. Bates – My Uncle Silas (short stories)
- Arna Wendell Bontemps – Drums at Dusk
- Pearl S. Buck – The Patriot
- Karel Čapek (posthumously) – Život a dílo skladatele Foltýna (Life and Work of the Composer Foltýn, translated as The Cheat, unfinished)
- Joyce Carey – Mister Johnson
- John Dickson Carr
- The Black Spectacles
- The Problem of the Wire Cage
- The Reader is Warned (as Carter Dickson)
- Drop to His Death (with John Rhode)
- Aimé Césaire – "Cahier d'un retour au pays natal" (in Volontés, August)
- Raymond Chandler – The Big Sleep
- James Hadley Chase – No Orchids for Miss Blandish
- Agatha Christie
- G.D.H. Cole and Margaret Cole – Greek Tragedy
- Jeffrey Dell – Nobody Ordered Wolves
- Pierre Drieu La Rochelle – Gilles
- John Fante – Ask the Dust
- William Faulkner – If I Forget Thee Jerusalem (The Wild Palms/Old Man)
- Vardis Fisher – Children of God
- Zona Gale – Magna
- Konstantine Gamsakhurdia – The Right Hand of the Grand Master (დიდოსტატის კონსტანტინეს მარჯვენა)
- Henry Green – Party Going
- Yaroslav Halan – The Mountains are Smoking
- Ernest Hemingway – The Snows of Kilimanjaro
- Rayner Heppenstall – The Blaze of Noon
- Anne Hocking – Old Mrs. Fitzgerald
- Zora Neale Hurston – Moses, Man of the Mountain
- Aldous Huxley – After Many a Summer[10]
- Christopher Isherwood – Goodbye to Berlin
- James Joyce – Finnegans Wake
- Arthur Koestler – The Gladiators
- Richard Llewellyn – How Green Was My Valley[11]
- H. P. Lovecraft – The Outsider and Others
- Ngaio Marsh – Overture to Death[12]
- Henry Miller – Tropic of Capricorn
- Gladys Mitchell – Printer's Error[13]
- Christopher Morley – Kitty Foyle
- Ian Niall (as John McNeillie) – Wigtown Ploughman
- Anaïs Nin – Winter of Artifice
- Flann O'Brien – At Swim-Two-Birds
- John O'Hara – Files on Parade
- Juan Carlos Onetti – El pozo (The Pit)
- George Orwell – Coming Up for Air
- Ellery Queen – The Dragon's Teeth
- Katherine Anne Porter – Pale Horse, Pale Rider
- Clayton Rawson – The Footprints on the Ceiling
- Seymour Reit – The Friendly Ghost
- Jean Rhys – Good Morning, Midnight
- Dorothy L. Sayers – In the Teeth of the Evidence
- Pierre Schaeffer – Chlothar Nicole (Clotaire Nicole)
- John Steinbeck – The Grapes of Wrath
- Gladys Bronwyn Stern – The Woman in the Hall
- Rex Stout – Some Buried Caesar
- Jan Struther – Mrs. Miniver[14]
- Phoebe Atwood Taylor – Cold Steal (as Alice Tilton)
- Dalton Trumbo – Johnny Got His Gun
- S. S. Van Dine – The Winter Murder Case
- Simon Vestdijk – Sint Sebastiaan (first book chronologically in the Anton Wachter cycle)
- Elio Vittorini – Conversations in Sicily (Conversazione in Sicilia)
- Nathanael West – The Day of the Locust
- Ernest Vincent Wright – Gadsby
- Marguerite Yourcenar – Coup de Grâce
Children and young people
[edit]- Ludwig Bemelmans – Madeline (first in an eponymous series of seven books)
- Enid Blyton – The Enchanted Wood
- Edgar Rice Burroughs – Tarzan the Magnificent
- Lavinia R. Davis – Hobby Horse Hill
- Hardie Gramatky – Little Toot
- Carolyn Haywood – "B" is for Betsy (first in Betsy series)
- Robert Lawson – Ben and Me: An Astonishing Life of Benjamin Franklin By His Good Mouse Amos
- Hilda Lewis – The Ship That Flew
- Lucy Maud Montgomery – Anne of Ingleside
- Violet Needham – The Black Riders (first in the Stormy Petrel series)
- Carola Oman – Alfred, King of the English
- Arthur Ransome – We Didn't Mean To Go To Sea
- Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings – The Yearling
- Joan G. Robinson – A Stands for Angel
- Felix Salten – Bambis Kinder, eine Familie in Walde (Bambi's Children)
- Alison Uttley – A Traveller in Time
- Laura Ingalls Wilder – By the Shores of Silver Lake
- Ursula Moray Williams – Adventures of the Little Wooden Horse
Drama
[edit]- Philip Barry – The Philadelphia Story
- Bertolt Brecht
- Life of Galileo (Leben des Galilei; completed)
- Mother Courage and Her Children (Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder; written)
- Mikhail Bulgakov – Batumi (left unfinished)
- Max Catto – Punch without Judy[15]
- T. S. Eliot – The Family Reunion
- Jean Giraudoux – Ondine
- Ian Hay – Little Ladyship
- Frank Harvey – Saloon Bar[16]
- Lillian Hellman – The Little Foxes[17]
- George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart – The Man Who Came to Dinner
- Joseph Kesselring – Arsenic and Old Lace[18]
- Clare Boothe Luce – Margin for Error[19]
- Hugh Mills and Wells Root – As You Are
- William Saroyan – The Time of Your Life
- Will Scott – Married for Money[20]
Poetry
[edit]- W. H. Auden
- Journey to a War (with diary entries and nonfiction prose by Christopher Isherwood; March 16)[21]
- "September 1, 1939" (in The New Republic (U.S.) October 18)
- Vladimir Cavarnali – Răsadul verde al inimii stelele de sus îl plouă (The Heart's Green Seedling Is Rained upon by the Stars Above)
- Aimé Césaire – Cahier d'un retour au pays natal (Notebook on a Return to the Native Land)
- T. S. Eliot – Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats
- José Gorostiza – Muerte sin fin (Death without End)[22]
- Javier del Granado – Rosas Pálidas (Pale Roses)
- Changampuzha Krishna Pillai – Rahtapuspangal
- Christopher Smart – Jubilate Agno (as Rejoice in the Lamb: A Song from Bedlam, edited by W. F. Stead; completed by 1763)
Non-fiction
[edit]- Adrian Bell – Men and the Fields
- Lord David Cecil – The Young Melbourne and the Story of his Marriage with Caroline Lamb
- Savitri Devi – A Warning to the Hindus
- Norbert Elias – The Civilizing Process (Über den Prozeß der Zivilisation)
- Mary Lascelles – Jane Austen and Her Art
- Erwin Panofsky – Studies in Iconology
- Ed Ricketts – Between Pacific Tides
- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry – Wind, Sand and Stars (Terre des hommes)[23]
- Ronald Syme – The Roman Revolution
- Bill W. and Dr. Bob – The Big Book
- Gamel Woolsey – Death's Other Kingdom
Births
[edit]- January 10 – Jared Carter, American poet and author
- January 12 – Jacques Hamelink, Dutch poet, novelist and literary critic, best known for short stories (died 2021)[24]
- January 29 – Germaine Greer, Australian-born feminist author[25]
- February 19 – Erin Pizzey, English novelist and founder of world's first domestic violence shelter[26]
- February 25 – Gerald Murnane, Australian novelist
- March 15 – Alicia Freilich, Venezuelan novelist
- March 25 – Toni Cade Bambara, African-American writer (died 1995)
- April 10 – Penny Vincenzi, née Hannaford, English novelist (died 2018)[27]
- April 12 – Alan Ayckbourn, English dramatist[28]
- April 13 – Seamus Heaney, Irish poet (died 2013)[29]
- April 22 – Jason Miller, American playwright and actor (died 2001)[30]
- May 4 – Amos Oz, né Klausner, Israeli author (died 2018)[31]
- June 5 – Margaret Drabble, English novelist[32]
- June 14 – Penelope Farmer, English children's writer
- June 15 – Brian Jacques, English writer (died 2011)[33]
- July 2 – Ferdinand Mount, English journalist and novelist
- August 1 – Robert James Waller, American novelist (died 2017)[34]
- September 6 – Dan Cragg, American science-fiction author
- September 16 – Breyten Breytenbach, South African writer and painter[35]
- September 9 – Ed Victor, American-born literary agent (died 2017)[36]
- September 24 – Jacky Gillott, English novelist (suicide 1980)
- October 6 – Melvyn Bragg, English novelist, critic and broadcast presenter[37]
- October 7 – Clive James, Australian writer, humorist and television personality (died 2019)[38]
- October 8 – Harvey Pekar, American memoirist and graphic-novel scriptwriter (died 2010)[39]
- October 9 – John Pilger, Australian-born journalist and documentary filmmaker[40]
- October 28 – Giulio Angioni, Italian writer and anthropologist (died 2017)[citation needed]
- October 29 – Malay Roy Choudhury, Bengali poet, novelist and creator of the Indian Hungry generation literary and cultural movement[41]
- November 17 – Auberon Waugh, English journalist and novelist (died 2001)[42]
- November 18 – Margaret Atwood, Canadian novelist and poet[43]
- November 25 – Shelagh Delaney, English dramatist (died 2011)[44]
- December 3 – Lee Israel, American biographer and literary forger (died 2014)[45]
- December 11 – Thomas McGuane, American writer
- December 18 – Michael Moorcock, English science fiction writer[46]
Deaths
[edit]- January 8 – Caton Theodorian, Romanian dramatist and novelist (born 1871)
- January 27 - Lewis Jones, Welsh miners' leader and novelist (born 1897)[47]
- January 28 – W. B. Yeats, Irish poet (born 1865)[48]
- February 2 – Amanda McKittrick Ros, Irish novelist and poet noted for her purple prose (born 1860)[49]
- February 5 – Teresa Mañé, Spanish teacher, editor and writer (born [1865)[50]
- February 18 – Okamoto Kanoko (岡本 かの子, Ohnuki Kano), Japanese tanka poet (born 1889)
- February 22 – Antonio Machado, Spanish poet (born 1875)[51]
- March 7 – Ludwig Fulda, German playwright and poet, suicide (born 1862)[52]
- March 23 – Richard Halliburton, American travel writer (born 1900)
- April 5 – Sibyl Marvin Huse, French-born American author and teacher (born 1866).[53]
- April 11 – S. S. Van Dine (Willard Huntington Wright), American crime novelist and art critic (born 1888)[54]
- May 23 – Margarete Böhme, German novelist (born 1867)[55]
- May 27 – Joseph Roth, Austrian novelist (born 1894)[56]
- June 5 – Solomon Cleaver, Canadian storyteller and novelist (born 1855)
- June 13 – Volter Kilpi, Finnish novelist (born 1874)[57]
- June 14 – Vladislav Khodasevich, Russian poet and critic (born 1886)
- June 26 – Ford Madox Ford (Ford Hermann Hueffer), English novelist (born 1873)[58]
- July 5 – Mrs. O. F. Walton, English writer of Christian children's books (born 1849)
- July 8 – Havelock Ellis, English sexual psychologist and writer (born 1859)[59]
- August 7 – Leonard Merrick, English novelist (born 1864)[60]
- August 15 – Federico Gamboa, Mexican diplomat and writer (born 1864)[61]
- August 20 – Agnes Giberne, English children's writer (born 1845)[62]
- August 23
- Sidney Howard, American writer (born 1891)[63]
- Robin Hyde (Iris Guiver Wilkinson), South African-born New Zealand poet and novelist, suicide (born 1905)
- August 31 – Wilhelm Bölsche, German journalist, editor and science writer (born [1861)[64]
- September 6 – Arthur Rackham, English book illustrator (born 1867)[65]
- September 7 – Kyōka Izumi, Japanese author (b. 1873)[66]
- September 19 – Ethel M. Dell, English romantic novelist (born 1881)
- October 23 – Zane Grey, American western novelist (born 1872)
- October 29 – Dwight B. Waldo, American educator and historian (born 1864)
- November – Pedro Nolasco Cruz Vergara, Chilean literary critic, novelist, writer, and politician (born 1857)[67]
- November 6 – Eliza D. Keith, American educator, author, and journalist (born 1854)[68]
- December 2 – Llewelyn Powys, English novelist and autobiographer (born 1884)[69]
- December 13 – Frances Brackett Damon (Percy Larkin), American writer (born 1857)[70]
- unknown dates
- Anna Braden, American author, editor, elocutionist (born 1858)
- Mary Frances Dowdall, English novelist and non-fiction writer (born 1876)
- Culai Neniu, Moldovan folklorist and dramatist (shot; born 1905)
Awards
[edit]- Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Eleanor Doorly, The Radium Woman
- James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Aldous Huxley After Many a Summer Dies the Swan
- James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: David C. Douglas, English Scholars
- Newbery Medal for children's literature: Elizabeth Enright, Thimble Summer
- Nobel Prize in literature: Frans Eemil Sillanpää
- Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Robert E. Sherwood, Abe Lincoln in Illinois
- Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: John Gould Fletcher, Selected Poems
- Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, The Yearling[71]
References
[edit]- ^ "History". The Kenyon Review. Archived from the original on 2008-12-30. Retrieved 2007-01-26.
- ^ Despina Kakoudaki (2014). Anatomy of a Robot: Literature, Cinema, and the Cultural Work of Artificial People. Rutgers University Press. p. 129. ISBN 9780813562179.
- ^ Howarth, Herbert (Spring 1959). "T. S. Eliot's Criterion: The Editor and His Contributors". Comparative Literature. 11 (2): 97–110. doi:10.2307/1768640. JSTOR 1768640.
- ^ King, Steve. "Chandler, Marlowe, The Big Sleep". Today in Literature. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
- ^ Montefiore, Simon Sebag (2007). Young Stalin. London: Phoenix. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-4072-2145-8.
- ^ Daniel, Paul (1978). "Destinul unui poet". In Fondane, Benjamin (ed.). Poezii. Bucharest: Editura Minerva. pp. 633–635. OCLC 252065138.
- ^ Chignell, Hugh (2011). Public Issue Radio: Talks, News and Current Affairs in the Twentieth Century. Springer. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-230-34645-1.
- ^ Lawson, Mark (2014-11-01). "The daddy of Broadway". The Guardian. London. p. 18 (Review).
- ^ Ian Ousby (23 February 1996). The Cambridge Paperback Guide to Literature in English. Cambridge University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-521-43627-4.
- ^ Aldous Huxley (1939). After Many a Summer: A Novel. Chatto and Windus.
- ^ "Richard Llewellyn". BBC Wales. 28 November 2008. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
- ^ Drayton, Joanne (2008). Ngaio Marsh: Her Life in Crime. Harper Collins. pp. 136–147. ISBN 978000 7328680.
- ^ Reilly, John M. Twentieth Century Crime & Mystery Writers. Springer, 2015. Page 1089
- ^ Deidre Lynch; William Beatty Warner (1996). Cultural Institutions of the Novel. Duke University Press. p. 169. ISBN 9780822318439.
- ^ Theatre World, Volume 33, Issues 180-186. Iliffe Specialist Publications, 1940. p.116
- ^ Wearing, J.P. The London Stage 1930-1939: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. Page 769
- ^ "The Little Foxes". Playbill Vault. Retrieved 2014-04-24.
- ^ "Arsenic and Old Lace", Brooks Atkinson, The New York Times, 11 January 1941.
- ^ "Margin for Error Opens". The New York Times. October 15, 1939. p. 48.
- ^ Wearing, J. P. (2014). The London Stage 1930–1939: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 769.
- ^ Cox, Michael, ed. (2004). The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860634-5.
- ^ Sheldon C. Penn (2011). "Oneiric landscapes of creation: Visions of life and death in José Gorostiza's 'Muerte sin fin'". Romance Studies (29 (4)): 255–268.
- ^ Miller, John R.; Fay, Eliot G. (1946). "Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: A Bibliography". The French Review. 19 (5). American Association of Teachers of French: 299–309 [p. 300]. JSTOR 381288.
- ^ "Dichter en schrijver Jacques Hamelink (82) overleden". rd.nl. 18 November 2021. Archived from the original on 7 April 2023.
- ^ Stephen Pollard (2009). Ten Days that Changed the Nation: The Making of Modern Britain. Simon & Schuster. p. 200.
- ^ "World Who's Who Of Women 1990/91". Taylor & Francis. July 1, 1990 – via Google Books.
- ^ Danuta Kean (February 28, 2018). "Penny Vincenzi obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
- ^ Sidney Howard White (1984). Alan Ayckbourn. Twayne. p. 1. ISBN 9780805768701.
- ^ Neil Corcoran (30 August 2013). "Seamus Heaney obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
- ^ Pogrebin, Robin (May 15, 2001). "Jason Miller, Playwright and Actor, Dies at 62". The New York Times. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
- ^ Kershner, Isabel (28 December 2018). "Amos Oz, Israeli Author and Peace Advocate, Dies at 79". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
- ^ Vicki K. Janik; Del Ivan Janik; Emmanuel Sampath Nelson (2002). Modern British Women Writers: An A-to-Z Guide. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-313-31030-0.
- ^ "Brian Jacques". The Telegraph. 2011-02-08. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
- ^ "Robert James Waller, Author of 'The Bridges of Madison County', Dies at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
- ^ "Breyten Breytenbach". South African History Online. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
- ^ Barnett, David (8 June 2017). "Ed Victor obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
- ^ "Bragg, Baron, (Melvyn Bragg) (born 6 Oct. 1939)". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u8507. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
- ^ Jeffries, Stuart (27 November 2019). "Clive James Obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
- ^ "Grimes, William (July 12, 2010). "Harvey Pekar, 'American Splendor' Creator, Dies at 70". The New York Times.
- ^ Europa Publications (2003). International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004. Psychology Press. p. 444. ISBN 978-1-85743-179-7.
- ^ "Bengali poet Malay Roy Choudhury dies". New Age. 26 October 2023. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
- ^ Jeffrey Heath (1 January 1983). Picturesque Prison: Evelyn Waugh and His Writing. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-7735-6088-8.
- ^ Margaret Atwood (1988). Jan Garden Castro; Kathryn Van Spanckeren (eds.). Margaret Atwood: Vision and Forms. Southern Illinois University Press. p. xxix. ISBN 9780809314089.
- ^ Barker, Dennis (21 November 2011). "Obituary: Shelagh Delaney". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
- ^ "Lee Israel, literary forger - obituary". The Telegraph. 24 February 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
- ^ Wilfried Wilms; William Rasch (2006). Bombs Away!: Representing the Air War Over Europe and Japan. Rodopi. p. 235. ISBN 90-420-1759-7.
- ^ The Anglo-Welsh Review. Dock Leaves Press. 1983. p. 62.
- ^ K. P. S. Jochum (6 October 2006). The Reception of W. B. Yeats in Europe. A&C Black. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-8264-5963-3.
- ^ Ormsby, Frank (1988). Thine in Storm and Calm: An Amanda McKittrick Ros Reader. Belfast St Paul: Blackstaff Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-85640-408-5.
- ^ Davies, Catherine (1998). "The Libertarian Superwoman: Federica Montseny (1905-1994)". Spanish Women's Writing 1849–1996. London: Athlone Press. p. 78. ISBN 0-485-91006-3. LCCN 98-11468. OCLC 468307323.
- ^ William Arrowsmith; James Fearon Brown (1966). The Chimera: A Rough Beast. p. 5.
- ^ Lester, David (2005). Suicide and the Holocaust. Nova Publishers. p. 73. ISBN 978-1-59454-427-9.
- ^ "Obituary, Sibyl Marvin Huse. Died April 5, 1939". The Courier-News. 6 April 1939. p. 1. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
- ^ The Encyclopedia Americana. Grolier Incorporated. 2002. p. 894. ISBN 978-0-7172-0135-8.
- ^ Smith, Brian (1997). An encyclopedia of German women writers, 1900-1933 : biographies and bibliographies with exemplary readings. Lewiston, N.Y: E. Mellen Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780773485846.
- ^ Martin Kraft (May 27, 2009). "Joseph Roth: The Legend of the Holy Drinker". Krakow Post. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Assmann, Dietrich. "Kilpi, Volter (1874-1939)". The National Biography of Finland. Biografiakeskus, Suomen Kirjallisuuden Seura. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
- ^ August Nemo; Camille Flammarion (3 July 2019). Essential Novelists - Ford Madox Ford: The Redefinition of Modern Literature. Tacet Books. p. 3. ISBN 978-85-7777-331-2.
- ^ Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of London. Royal College of Physicians. 1968. p. 121.
- ^ Who's who in the Theatre. Pitman. 1967. p. 1664.
- ^ Bulletin of the Pan American Union. The Union. 1939. p. 676.
- ^ Copson, Belinda (2004-09-23). "Giberne, Agnes (1845–1939)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/58972. Retrieved 2020-10-18. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Arthur Gewirtz (2004). Sidney Howard and Clare Eames: American Theater's Perfect Couple of the 1920s. McFarland, Incorporated. p. 281. ISBN 9780786417513.
- ^ "Bölsche, Wilhelm - Deutsche Biographie".
- ^ Hamilton, James Stanley (2004-09-23). "Rackham, Arthur, (1867-1939)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35645. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Keene, Donald (1998). "Izumi Kyōka". Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature of the Modern Era. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 202–219. ISBN 0-231-11435-4.
- ^ Alone; Hernán Díaz Arrieta (2001). Diario íntimo, 1917-1947. Zig-Zag. p. 72.
- ^ "Obituary for Eliza D. Keith". San Francisco Examiner. November 6, 1939. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
- ^ George Santayana (2001). The Letters of George Santayana. MIT Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-262-19495-2.
- ^ "Mrs. Frances B. Damon". The Eastern Gazette 12-14-1939, p.5. Retrieved 20 March 2022 – via abbott-library.com.
- ^ Heinz-D. Fischer; Erika J. Fischer (14 February 2012). Chronicle of the Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction: Discussions, Decisions and Documents. Walter de Gruyter. p. 12. ISBN 978-3-11-097330-3.