1938 in literature
| List of years in literature | 
|---|
| (table) | 
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1938.
Events
- January
- The John Dos Passos trilogy U.S.A. is published, containing his novels The 42nd Parallel (1930), 1919 (1932), and The Big Money (1936).
 - Samuel Beckett is stabbed in the chest in Paris and nearly killed.
 
 - February 21 – The gay American writer and composer Paul Bowles marries the lesbian American writer Jane Auer at a Reformed Church in Manhattan.
 - March 7 – Samuel Beckett's first completed novel Murphy is published in London.
 - July 11 – The first live drama adaptation in Orson Welles' The Mercury Theatre on the Air series on CBS Radio in the United States is broadcast: Bram Stoker's Dracula.
 - August – Muslims protest in London against passages they see as disrespectful to their religion in H. G. Wells' A Short History of the World (1922).[1]
 - September 13 – The first production in Britain of a play by Bertolt Brecht, Mrs Carrar's Rifles, opens at the Unity Theatre, London.
 - October 30 – Orson Welles' radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds (with script by Howard Koch) is broadcast in The Mercury Theatre on the Air series.
 - December 24 – Jorge Luis Borges is injured in an accident and develops blood poisoning. While recovering the following year he will write the first short story in his later characteristic style.
 - Uncertain dates
- The first complete performance of both parts of Goethe's Faust (1808/32) is given at the Goetheanum in Dornach, Switzerland.[2]
 - The avant-garde musician and theoretician Pierre Schaeffer begins his writing career as an essayist for a number of French musical journals.
 
 
New books
Fiction
- Margery Allingham – The Fashion in Shrouds
 - Eric Ambler
 - Vladimir Bartol – Alamut
 - Anthony Berkeley – Not to Be Taken
 - Elizabeth Bowen – The Death of the Heart
 - Dorothy Bowers – Postscript to Poison
 - Lynn Brock – The Silver Sickle Case
 - Edgar Rice Burroughs – Tarzan and the Forbidden City
 - Taylor Caldwell – Dynasty of Death
 - Victor Canning – Mr. Finchley Goes to Paris
 - John Dickson Carr
- The Four False Weapons, Being the Return of Bencolin
 - To Wake the Dead
 - The Crooked Hinge
 - The Judas Window (as Carter Dickson)
 - Death in Five Boxes (as Carter Dickson)
 
 - Peter Cheyney
 - Agatha Christie
 - Albert Cohen – Nailcruncher
 - Freeman Wills Crofts
 - J.J. Connington
 - René Daumal – A Night of Serious Drinking (La Grande Beuverie)
 - Cecil Day-Lewis – The Beast Must Die
 - John Dos Passos – The Big Money (completing the U.S.A. trilogy)
 - Daphne du Maurier – Rebecca
 - Lawrence Durrell – The Black Book
 - Mircea Eliade – Marriage in Heaven (Nuntă în cer)
 - William Faulkner – The Unvanquished
 - Rachel Field – All This and Heaven Too
 - C. S. Forester
 - Anthony Gilbert – Treason in My Breast
 - Julien Gracq – The Castle of Argol (Au château d'Argol)
 - Robert Graves – Count Belisarius
 - Graham Greene – Brighton Rock
 - Walter Greenwood
 - Cyril Hare – Death Is No Sportsman
 - Xavier Herbert – Capricornia
 - Robin Hyde – The Godwits Fly (semi-autobiographical)
 - Michael Innes – Lament for a Maker
 - Margaret Kennedy – The Midas Touch
 - Alan Kennington – She Died Young
 - Emilio Lussu – Un anno sull'altopiano
 - C. S. Lewis – Out of the Silent Planet
 - Norman Lindsay – Age of Consent
 - Ngaio Marsh
 - Gladys Mitchell – St Peter's Finger
 - Vladimir Nabokov
- The Gift (Дар)
 - Invitation to a Beheading (Приглашение на казнь; serialization concludes)
 
 - E. Phillips Oppenheim – The Colossus of Arcadia
 - Kate O'Brien – Pray for the Wanderer
 - John O'Hara – Hope of Heaven
 - Ellery Queen
 - Graciliano Ramos – Vidas Secas (Barren Lives)
 - Ayn Rand – Anthem
 - Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings – The Yearling
 - Clayton Rawson – Death from a Top Hat
 - Joseph Roth – The Emperor's Tomb
 - Jean-Paul Sartre – Nausea (La Nausée)
 - Georges Simenon
 - Esphyr Slobodkina – Caps for Sale: A Tale of a Peddler, Some Monkeys and Their Monkey Business
 - Eleanor Smith – The Spanish House
 - Howard Spring – My Son, My Son
 - John Steinbeck – The Long Valley
 - Rex Stout – Too Many Cooks
 - Cecil Street
 - Kressmann Taylor – Address Unknown (short story)
 - Phoebe Atwood Taylor
- The Annulet of Gilt
 - Banbury Bog
 - The Cut Direct (as by Alice Tilton)
 - Murder at the New York World's Fair (as by Freeman Dana)
 
 - B. Traven – The Bridge in the Jungle
 - S. S. Van Dine – The Gracie Allen Murder Case
 - František Bernard Vaněk – Na krásné samotě
 - Henry Wade – Released for Death
 - Winifred Watson – Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
 - Evelyn Waugh – Scoop
 - Ethel Lina White – Step in the Dark
 - T. H. White – The Sword in the Stone
 - Gale Wilhelm – Torchlight to Valhalla
 - Francis Brett Young – Dr. Bradley Remembers
 
Children and young people
- BB (Denys Watkins-Pitchford) – Wild Lone: The Story of a Pytchley Fox
 - Claire Huchet Bishop – The Five Chinese Brothers
 - Enid Blyton – The Secret Island
 - Eleanor Graham – The Children Who Lived in a Barn
 - Joan Kahn – "Ladies and Gentlemen," said the Ringmaster
 - Eric Knight – Lassie Come-Home
 - Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings – The Yearling
 - Kate Seredy – The White Stag
 - Noel Streatfeild – The Circus Is Coming
 - T. H. White – The Sword in the Stone
 - John F. C. Westerman – John Wentley Takes Charge (first in the John Wentley trilogy)
 - Ursula Moray Williams – Adventures of the Little Wooden Horse[3]
 
Drama
- Jean Anouilh – Thieves' Carnival (Le Bal des Voleurs)
 - Robert Ardrey – Casey Jones
 - Max Catto – They Walk Alone
 - Paul Claudel – L'Histoire de Tobie et de Sara (The History of Tobit and Sara, first version)
 - M. J. Farrell – Spring Meeting
 - Patrick Hamilton – Gaslight
 - H.M. Harwood – The Innocent Party
 - Esther McCracken – Quiet Wedding
 - Kaj Munk – Han sidder ved Smeltediglen (He sits by the melting pot)
 - Michael Pertwee – Death on the Table
 - J. B. Priestley – When We Are Married
 - Gordon Sherry – The Bare Idea
 - Robert E. Sherwood – Abe Lincoln in Illinois
 - Dodie Smith – Dear Octopus
 - Stephen Spender – Trial of a Judge
 - Lesley Storm – Tony Draws a Horse
 - Arnold Sundgaard
- Spirochete: A History
 - with Marc Connelly – Everywhere I Roam
 
 - Rodolfo Usigli – El gesticulador
 - Theodore Ward – Big White Fog
 - Thornton Wilder – Our Town
 - Emlyn Williams – The Corn is Green
 - Tennessee Williams – Not About Nightingales (written; first performed 1998)
 - W. B. Yeats – Purgatory
 
Poetry
- Alfred Kreymborg – The Planets: A Modern Allegory (radio play in verse)
 - Mary Pettibone Poole – A Glass Eye at a Keyhole
 
Non-fiction
- Crane Brinton – The Anatomy of Revolution
 - Hall Caine (died 1931) – Life of Christ
 - Cyril Connolly – Enemies of Promise
 - Geoffrey Faber – The Romance of a Bookshop 1904–1938
 - Robert Newton Flew – Jesus and His Church. A study of the idea of the Ecclesia in the New Testament
 - Edgar Innes Fripp (died 1931) – Shakespeare, Man and Artist
 - Elie Halévy – The Era of Tyrannies
 - Johan Huizinga – Homo Ludens
 - Agnes Hunt – This Is My Life (autobiography of pioneer orthopedic nurse)[4]
 - C. L. R. James – The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution
 - Claude Scudamore Jarvis – Desert and Delta. An account of modern Egypt
 - Jomo Kenyatta – Facing Mount Kenya
 - Anne Morrow Lindbergh – Listen! The Wind
 - Robert McAlmon – Being Geniuses Together, 1920–1930
 - Thomas Mann – The Coming Victory of Democracy
 - George Orwell – Homage to Catalonia[5]
 - Nichita Smochină – Republica Moldovenească a Sovietelor (The Moldavian Republic of Soviets)[6]
 - Derek A. Traversi – An Approach to Shakespeare
 - H. G. Wells – World Brain
 - Virginia Woolf – Three Guineas
 
Births
- January 2 – Hans Herbjørnsrud, Norwegian short story writer (died 2023)[7]
 - January 5 – Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (also known as James Ngigi), Kenyan novelist (died 2025)
 - January 6 – Mario Rodríguez Cobos ("Silo"), Argentine author and spiritualist (died 2010)
 - January 13 – Nabaneeta Dev Sen, Indian novelist, children's author and poet (died 2019)
 - January 20 – Liz Calder, English publisher and editor
 - February 7 – Andrea Newman, English novelist and screenwriter (died 2019)[8]
 - February 9 – Jovette Marchessault, French Canadian writer and artist (died 2012)
 - February 12
- Judy Blume, American children's author
 - Tor Obrestad, Norwegian novelist, poet and documentary writer (died 2020)[9]
 
 - February 22 – Ishmael Reed, American poet, essayist and novelist
 - March 1 – Michael Kurland, American author of sci-fi and detective fiction
 - March 14 – Eleanor Bron, English humorous writer and actress
 - March 24 – Ian Hamilton, English critic, biographer and poet (died 2001)
 - March 27 – Hansjörg Schneider, Swiss novelist (died 2016)
 - April 20 – Chiung Yao, Taiwanese romance novelist (died 2024)[10]
 - April 25 – John Nagenda, Ugandan writer and sportsman (died 2023)
 - April 30 – Larry Niven, American sci-fi author
 - May 13 – Norma Klein, American author (died 1989)
 - May 15 – Nancy Garden, American author (died 2014)[11]
 - May 16 – Marco Aurelio Denegri, Peruvian literature critic, television host and sexologist (died 2018)[12]
 - May 25
- Raymond Carver, American short-story writer and poet (died 1988)
 - Margaret Forster, English novelist and biographer (died 2016)
 
 - May 26 – Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, Russian novelist and playwright
 - June 5
- Allan Ahlberg, English children's author (died 2025)
 - M. K. Wren (Martha Kay Renfroe), American novelist (died 2016)
 
 - June 16 – Joyce Carol Oates, American novelist
 - June 24 – Lawrence Block, American crime fiction writer
 - June 26 – Maria Velho da Costa, Portuguese writer (died 2020)
 - July 15 – Josephine Cox, English novelist (died 2020)
 - July 19
- Nicholas Bethell, English historian and politician (died 2007)
 - Dom Moraes, Indian poet and columnist (died 2004)[13]
 - Tom Raworth, English poet (died 2017)
 - Mary-Kay Wilmers, American-born editor
 
 - July 28 – Robert Hughes, Australian critic and historian (died 2012)[14]
 - August 15 – Janusz Zajdel, Polish writer (died 1985)
 - August 21 – Mudrooroo (Colin Johnson), Australian novelist (died 2019)
 - August 25 – Frederick Forsyth, English thriller writer (died 2025)
 - August 30 – Dorota Terakowska, Polish writer and journalist, author of fantasy books for children and young adults (died 2004)
 - September 3 – Caryl Churchill, English dramatist
 - September 12 – Richard Booth, Welsh bookseller (died 2019)
 - September 15 – Charles L. Mee, American dramatist
 - September 18 – Poornachandra Tejaswi, Kannada writer (died 2007)
 - September 19 – Keorapetse Kgositsile, South African Poet Laureate (died 2018)
 - October 12 – Anne Perry (Juliet Marion Hulme), English historical novelist (died 2023)
 - October 13 – Hugo Young, English journalist (died 2003)
 - October 17 – Les Murray, Australian poet (died 2019)
 - October 19 – Allan Massie, Singapore-born Scottish writer[15]
 - November 3 – Terrence McNally, American playwright (died 2020)
 - November 4 – Daniel Snowman, English non-fiction writer and historian
 - December 14 – Leonardo Boff (Genézio Darci Boff), Brazilian philosopher and theologian
 - December 21 – Frank Moorhouse, Australian journalist, author and screenwriter (died 2022)
 - December 31 – Basudeb Dasgupta, Bengali novelist (died 2005)
 - unknown date – Gabriel Ruhumbika, Tanzanian novelist[16]
 
Deaths
- January 4 – Paola Drigo, Italian writer (born 1876)
 - January 16 – Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay (Sarat Chandra Chattergee), Bengali novelist (born 1876)
 - January 19 – Branislav Nušić, Serbian novelist and dramatist (born 1864)
 - January 29 – Armando Palacio Valdés, Spanish novelist and critic (born 1853)
 - February 13 – Momčilo Nastasijević, Serbian poet, novelist and dramatist (born 1894)
 - March 6 – Eva Allen Alberti, American dramatics teacher (born 1856)
 - March 27 – Helen M. Winslow, American editor, author and publisher (born 1851)
 - March 31 – Willem Kloos, Dutch poet and critic (born 1859)
 - April 19 – Sir Henry Newbolt, English poet (born 1862)
 - April 21 – Lady Ottoline Morrell, English literary hostess (born 1873)
 - May 26 – James Forbes, Canadian American dramatist and screenwriter (born 1871)
 - June 9 – Ovid Densusianu, Romanian poet, philologist and literary historian (born 1873)
 - June 26
- James Weldon Johnson, American politician, poet and activist (born 1871)
 - E. V. Lucas, English essayist and biographer (born 1868)
 
 - July 21 – Owen Wister, American Western fiction writer and historian (born 1860)
 - August 7 – Konstantin Stanislavski, Russian theatre director (born 1863)
 - August 26 – Millosh Gjergj Nikolla, Albanian poet and writer (tuberculosis, born 1911)
 - September 15 – Thomas Wolfe, American novelist (tuberculosis, born 1900)
 - October 3 – Olivia Shakespear, British novelist, playwright and patron of the arts (born 1863)
 - October 27 – Lascelles Abercrombie, English poet and literary critic (born 1881)
 - December 13 – Virginia Frazer Boyle, American author and poet (born 1863)
 - December 23 – Robert Herrick, American realist novelist (born 1868)
 - December 25 – Karel Čapek, Czech science fiction author and dramatist (pneumonia, born 1890)
 - December 27 – Osip Mandelstam, Russian poet and essayist (in detention, born 1891)
 
Awards
- Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Noel Streatfeild, The Circus Is Coming
 - Hawthornden Prize – David Jones, In Parenthesis
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: C. S. Forester, A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Sir Edmund Chambers, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
 - Newbery Medal for children's literature: Kate Seredy, The White Stag
 - Newdigate prize: Michael Thwaites
 - Nobel Prize in Literature: Pearl S. Buck
 - Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Thornton Wilder, Our Town
 - Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Marya Zaturenska, Cold Morning Sky
 - Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: John Phillips Marquand, The Late George Apley
 
References
- ^ Baker, Kenneth (2016). On the Burning of Books. London: Unicorn. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-1-910787-11-3.
 - ^ Marie Savitch (1967). Marie Steiner-von Sivers: Fellow Worker with Rudolf Steiner. Rudolf Steiner P. p. 221. ISBN 9780880100571.
 - ^ Hahn, Daniel (2015). The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature (2nd ed.). Oxford. University Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780198715542.
 - ^ Sankey, A. E. (2004). "Hunt, Dame Agnes Gwendoline (1866–1948), worker with physically disabled people". In Hutchins, Roger (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34054. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
 - ^ Buchanan, Tom (2002-09-01). "Three Lives of Homage to Catalonia". The Library. 3 (3): 302. doi:10.1093/library/3.3.302. ISSN 0024-2160. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
 - ^ Charles King (2000). The Moldovans: Romania, Russia, and the Politics of Culture. Hoover Institution Press. pp. 181, 262, 279. ISBN 0-8179-9792-X
 - ^ "Hans Herbjørnsrud (85) er død". Varden (in Norwegian). Retrieved 18 July 2024.
 - ^ "Andrea Newman, creator of racy novels and TV dramas of tangled married life such as the hit 'Bouquet of Barbed Wire' – obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 13 November 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
 - ^ Rottem, Øystein. "Tor Obrestad". In Bolstad, Erik (ed.). Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Norsk nettleksikon. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
 - ^ "Chiung Yao: Top Chinese language writer dies in apparent suicide". BBC News. BBC. 4 December 2024. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
 - ^ "Nancy Garden: The author whose novel Annie on My Mind was credited". The Independent. 14 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2022-05-01. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
 - ^ "Marco Aurelio Denegri falleció a los 80 años tras una fibrosis pulmonar". La República (in Spanish). 27 July 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
 - ^ Brownjohn, Alan (4 June 2004). "Obituary: Dom Moraes". The Guardian. London.
 - ^ Kennedy, Randy (6 August 2012). "Robert Hughes, Art Critic Whose Writing Was Elegant and Contentious, Dies at 74". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
 - ^ "Massie, Allan Johnstone, (born 16 Oct. 1938), author and journalist". Who's Who. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U26927.
 - ^ Simon Gikandi (2 September 2003). Encyclopedia of African Literature. Routledge. p. 650. ISBN 978-1-134-58223-5.