This article contains information about the literary persons, events and publications of 1916.
Events
- January
- The Journal of Negro History is founded by Carter G. Woodson, father of "Black History" and "Negro History Week" in the United States.
- RyÃ
«nosuke Akutagawa's short story The Nose is published in a student magazine.
- March 1 â The National Library of Wales completes its transfer to purpose-built premises in Aberystwyth.
- March 22 â J. R. R. Tolkien and Edith Bratt marry at St Mary Immaculate Roman Catholic Church, Warwick, England. They will serve as inspiration for the fictional characters Beren and Lúthien. Tolkien leaves for military service in France at the beginning of June.
- March 30 â Don Marquis introduces the characters Archy and Mehitabel in "The Sun Dial" column in The Evening Sun (New York City). Archy is a poetry-writing cockroach unable to operate the typewriter shift key; Mehitabel is a cat.
- AprilâÂÂJune â Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry live as neighbours to D. H. and Frieda Lawrence at Higher Tregerthen, near Zennor in Cornwall (England).
- April 24âÂÂ30 â In the Easter Rising in Ireland, members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood proclaim an Irish Republic and the Irish Volunteers and Irish Citizen Army occupy the General Post Office and other buildings in Dublin, before surrendering to the British Army. Of the seven subsequently executed leaders of the Rising, Thomas MacDonagh, Patrick Pearse and Joseph Plunkett are poets and James Connolly a balladeer and playwright. The events are the theme of W. B. Yeats' poem "Easter, 1916", first published this September.
- May 16 â Natsume SÃ
Âseki's novel Light and Darkness (æÂÂæÂÂ, Mei An) begins to be serialized in the Tokyo and Osaka editions of the newspaper Asahi Shimbun, but will remain unfinished at the author's death on December 9, aged 49.
- July 1
- The poets W. N. Hodgson, Will Streets, Gilbert Waterhouse, Henry Field, Alfred Ratcliffe, Alexander Robertson and Bernard White are among 19,000 British soldiers killed on the First day on the Somme alone. The same day is chosen for the death of fictitious poet Cecil Valance in Alan Hollinghurst's 2011 novel The Stranger's Child. The Battle of the Somme continues until October 18, during which time American poet Alan Seeger (serving with the French), Irish writer Tom Kettle, English poet Edward Tennant, English short story writer Saki and English bowler Percy Jeeves (whose name P. G. Wodehouse borrowed for his character) are all killed. The English writer Robert Graves, novelist Stuart Cloete, playwright/actor Arnold Ridley and artist/poet David Jones are seriously injured â Graves is for a time believed killed. Ford Madox Hueffer suffers concussion and shell shock. A. A. Milne and J. R. R. Tolkien are invalided out. The English poet Siegfried Sassoon wins the Military Cross. The Cameron Highlander Dòmhnall Ruadh Chorùna composes the Scottish Gaelic love song An Eala Bhàn (The White Swan) in the oral literature tradition. The future U.K. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is wounded in September's Battle of FlersâÂÂCourcelette; sheltering in a slit trench, he reads Aeschylus in the original Greek.
- W. B. Yeats makes his fifth and final proposal of marriage to the newly widowed Maud Gonne in France.
- c. JulyâÂÂDecember â Poets Terence MacSwiney and Darrell Figgis are among Irish republicans detained in Reading Gaol (England) following the Easter Rising.
- Summer â In the United States, 15-year-old Margaret Mitchell writes a novella called Lost Laysen in two notebooks. She will later give the manuscript to a boyfriend and the book remains lost until the mid-1990s. It is published in 1996. Meanwhile, Mitchell will go on to write Gone with the Wind.
- September â Joseph Conrad's novella The Shadow-Line begins to be serialized in The English Review (London) and the Metropolitan Magazine (New York).
- October 6 â The poet Perpessicius loses his right arm fighting for the Romanians in a skirmish at Muratan.
- October 19 â New premises for the German National Library open in Leipzig.
- December â The first of many editions of Robert Baden-Powell's The Wolf Cub's Handbook is published.
- December 29 â James Joyce's semi-autobiographical novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is first published complete in book form, in New York by B. W. Huebsch.
New books
Fiction
- Sholem Aleichem â In America (ÃÂÃÂàÃÂ÷ÃÂâèÃÂçâ, In amerike), second part of Motl, Peysi the Cantor's Son: The Writings of an Orphan Boy (ÃÂÃÂøÃÂàäüÃÂÃÂáàÃÂâàÃÂÃÂàá; ÃÂêÃÂÿÃÂàäÿÃÂàÃÂ÷ ÃÂÃÂôàÃÂàÃÂ÷ ÃÂêÃÂÃÂ, )
- Sherwood Anderson â Windy McPherson's Son
- Ruby M. Ayres
- The Road That Bends
- Paper Roses
- A Man of His Word
- The Year After
- Henri Barbusse â Under Fire (Le Feu)
- Arnold Bennett â These Twain
- E. F. Benson
- David Blaize
- Mike
- The Freaks of Mayfair
- Adrien Bertrand â L'Appel du sol
- John Edward Bruce â The Awakening of Hezekiah Jones
- Mary Grant Bruce â Captain Jim
- Thomas Burke â Limehouse Nights (including "Beryl and the Croucher", "The Chink and the Child" and "Gina of the Chinatown")
- Gilbert Cannan â Mendel: a story of youth
- Ethel M. Dell â The Bars of Iron
- Alfred Döblin â The Three Leaps of Wang Lun (Die drei Sprünge des Wang-lun, dated 1915)
- Ronald Firbank â Inclinations
- Walter Flex â ' (The Wanderer between Two Worlds)
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman â With Her in Ourland
- Elinor Glyn â The Career of Katherine Bush
- Sarah Grand â The Winged Victory
- Louis Hémon â Maria Chapdelaine
- Hermann Hesse â Schön ist die Jugend
- William Dean Howells â The Leatherwood God
- James Joyce â A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- Franz Kafka â The Metamorphosis (Die Verwandlung, first book publication)
- Frigyes Karinthy
- Please, Sir! (Tanár úr, kérem)
- Voyage to Faremido (Utazás Faremidóba)
- Grace King â The Pleasant Ways of St. Medard
- Ring Lardner â You Know Me Al
- Gaston Leroux â Chéri-Bibi and Cécily
- Ada Leverson â Love At Second Sight
- Benito Lynch â The Caranchos of Florida
- I. I. Mironescu â Sandu Hurmuzel (short stories)
- George Moore â The Brook Kerith: A Syrian Story
- Mori Ã
Âgai â Takasebune (é«Â珠The Boat on the Takase River)
- Baroness Orczy â Leatherface
- Henrik Pontoppidan â De dødes Rige (The Realm of the Dead; publication concludes)
- Dorothy Richardson â Backwater
- Berta Ruck â In Another Girl's Shoes
- Ruth Sawyer â Seven Miles to Arden
- May Sinclair â Tasker Jevons
- Rabindranath Tagore â The Home and the World (à ¦Âà ¦°à § à ¦¬à ¦¾à ¦Âà ¦°à §Â, Ghôre Baire)
- Booth Tarkington â Seventeen: A Tale of Youth and Summer Time and the Baxter Family Especially William
- Mark Twain â The Mysterious Stranger (completed posthumously)
- Eduard Vilde â Mäeküla piimamees (The Milkman of Mäeküla)
- Edgar Wallace
- A Debt Discharged
- The Tomb of Ts'in
- Mrs Humphry Ward â Lady Connie
- Mary Webb â The Golden Arrow
- H. G. Wells â Mr. Britling Sees It Through
- Francis Brett Young â The Iron Age
Children and young people
Drama
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Poetry
Non-fiction
Births
- January 10 â Bernard Binlin Dadié, Ivorien author and politician (died 2019)
- February 15 â Ian Ballantine, American publisher (died 1995)
- March 4
- Giorgio Bassani, Italian author (died 2000)
- Hans Eysenck, German-born England-based psychologist (died 1997)
- April 12 â Beverly Cleary, American children's author (died 2021)
- April 15 â Helene Hanff, American writer and critic (died 1997)
- May 12 â Albert Murray, American critic, novelist and biographer (died 2013)
- May 21 â Harold Robbins, American novelist (died 1997)
- May 28 â Walker Percy, American novelist (died 1990)
- June 16 â Barbara Skelton, English fiction writer, memoirist and literary figure (died 1996)
- July 14 â Natalia Ginzburg, Italian author (died 1991)
- July 24 â John D. MacDonald, American novelist and short story writer (died 1986)
- August 28
- C. Wright Mills, American sociologist (died 1962)
- Jack Vance, American mystery, fantasy, and science fiction writer (died 2013)
- September 13 â Roald Dahl, Welsh-born children's author (died 1990)
- September 14 â Eric Bentley, English-born American drama critic (died 2020)
- September 17 â Mary Stewart (Mary Rainbow), English romantic suspense novelist (died 2014)
- September 19 â Giles Romilly, English journalist (died 1967)
- September 25 â Jessica Anderson, Australian novelist and short story writer (died 2010)
- September 27 â S. Yizhar (Yizhar Smilansky), Israeli author (died 2006)
- October 3 â James Herriot (James Alfred Wight), English writer and veterinary surgeon (died 1995)
- October 10 â David Gascoyne, English Surrealist poet (died 2001)
- October 11 â Ahmad Abd al-Ghafur Attar, Saudi Arabian writer, journalist and poet (died 1991)
- October 12 â Alice Childress, African American playwright, actress and novelist (died 1994)
- November 7 â Ian Niall (John Kincaid McNeillie), Scottish novelist and non-fiction writer (died 2002)
- November 18 â Peter Weiss, German writer, painter and filmmaker (died 1982)
- November 24 â James Pope-Hennessy, English biographer and travel writer (murdered 1974)
- December 14 â Shirley Jackson, American novelist and short story writer (died 1965)
- December 17 â Penelope Fitzgerald (Penelope Knox), English novelist (died 2000)
- December 30 â Lili Berger, Yiddish writer, antifascist militant and literary critic (died 1996)
Deaths
- January 27 â C. Morton Horne, Irish writer and performer (killed in action, born 1885)
- February 6 â Rubén DarÃÂo, Nicaraguan poet (born 1867)
- February 12 â John Townsend Trowbridge, American author (born 1827)
- February 28 â Henry James, American-born novelist (born 1843)
- April 19 â Emily Lee Sherwood Ragan, American author and journalist (born 1839)
- April 26 â Mário de Sá-Carneiro, Portuguese novelist and poet (suicide, born 1890)
- May 3 â Patrick Pearse, poet and Irish nationalist leader (executed, born 1879)
- May 13 â Sholem Aleichem, Ukrainian-born humorist (born 1859)
- May 25 â Jane Dieulafoy, French archaeologist and novelist (born 1851)
- May 28 (May 15 O.S.) â Ivan Franko, Ukrainian writer, translator and political activist (born 1856)
- May 31 â Gorch Fock (Johann Wilhelm Kinau), German poet and novelist (killed in action, born 1880)
- June 4 â Emma Rood Tuttle, American writer and poet (born 1839)
- June 7 â ÃÂmile Faguet, French critic (born 1847)
- June 30 â Eunice Gibbs Allyn, American correspondent, author, songwriter (born 1847)
- July 1
- W. N. Hodgson (Edward Melbourne), English war poet (killed in action, born 1893)
- Gilbert Waterhouse, English architect and war poet (killed in action, born 1883)
- August 8 â Lily Braun (Amalie von Kretschmann), German feminist writer (born 1865)
- August 27 â Petar KoÃÂiÃÂ, Bosnian novelist and politician (born 1877)
- September 7 â Annie Le Porte Diggs, Canadian-born American activist, journalist, author (born 1853)
- September 22 â Edward Tennant, English war poet (killed in action, born 1897)
- October 7 â James Whitcomb Riley, American poet (born 1849)
- October 21 â Olindo Guerrini, Italian poet (born 1845)
- October 25 â John Todhunter, Irish poet and dramatist (born 1839)
- November 14 â Saki (H. H. Munro), English short-story writer (killed in action, born 1870)
- November 15 â Molly Elliot Seawell, American novelist (born 1860)
- November 20 â Lucie Fulton Isaacs, American writer, philanthropist, suffragist (born 1841)
- November 22 â Jack London, American novelist (born 1876)
- November 27 â ÃÂmile Verhaeren, Belgian Symbolist poet (born 1855)
- December 9 â Natsume SÃ
Âseki, Japanese novelist (born 1867)
Awards
References
See also