This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1940.
Events
- January â The English literary magazine Horizon first appears in London, with Cyril Connolly, Peter Watson and Stephen Spender contributing.
- February â The Canadian writer Robertson Davies leaves the Old Vic repertory company in the U.K.
- March 11 â Ed Ricketts, John Steinbeck and six others leave Monterey for the Gulf of California on a marine invertebrate collecting expedition.
- April â MáirtÃÂn àCadhain is interned by the Irish government at Curragh Camp, as a member of the Irish Republican Army.
- May 14 â The Battle of the Netherlands ends with the surrender of the main Dutch forces to Nazi German invaders. This evening, the gay Dutch Jewish writer Jacob Hiegentlich takes poison, dying four days later aged 33.
- June 5 â The English novelist J. B. Priestley broadcasts his first Sunday evening radio Postscript, "An excursion to hell", on the BBC Home Service in the U.K., marking the role of pleasure steamers in the Dunkirk evacuation, which ended the day before.
- July
- Jean-Paul Sartre is taken prisoner by the Germans. Léopold Sédar Senghor also becomes a prisoner of war this year. P. G. Wodehouse is interned by the Germans as an enemy alien.
- American science fiction and fantasy pulp magazine Fantastic Novels begins its first run.
- July 26 â A movie adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is released, with Aldous Huxley as a screenwriter.
- September â In Uriage-les-Bains, Vichy France, Emmanuel Mounier and the Esprit circle establish a school of government and philosophy attuned to Catholic social teaching. Initially endorsing the Révolution nationale, Uriage is put off by Vichy's collaboration with Germany, and blends into the Christian left.
- September 10 â Virginia Woolf's London house at 37 Mecklenburgh Square is destroyed by bombing. On October 18 she sees the ruins of her previous home, 52 Tavistock Square, Bloomsbury, similarly destroyed.
- October
- Graham Greene's London house on Clapham Common Northside is destroyed by bombing, an event reflected in his novels The Ministry of Fear (1943) and The End of the Affair (1951).
- Philip Larkin enters St John's College, Oxford.
- October 4 â Brian O'Nolan's first "Cruiskeen Lawn" humorous column is published in The Irish Times (Dublin). In the second column he assumes the pseudonym Myles na gCopaleen. The original columns are composed in Irish. He continues the column until the year of his death in 1966.
- December â Penguin Books launches its Puffin Books children's imprint in the United Kingdom with War on Land by James Holland.
- December 21 â F. Scott Fitzgerald dies of a heart attack aged 44 in the apartment of Hollywood gossip columnist Sheilah Graham, leaving his novel The Last Tycoon unfinished. The following day, his friend and fellow novelist and screenwriter, Nathanael West, is killed aged 37 in an automobile accident in California.
- December 29 â Heavy bombing causes a Second Great Fire of London, destroying the premises of Simpkin, Marshall, the U.K.'s largest book wholesaler, and of many publishers also in the Paternoster Row area, including Longman, together with some 25,000 volumes in the Guildhall Library's stores and a copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam in a jewelled binding by Sangorski & Sutcliffe (1939). On dawn patrol as a fighter pilot, Douglas Blackwood sees his family's publishing business, William Blackwood, burning.
- December 31 â Echternacher Anzeiger, a Luxembourg newspaper, ends publication.
- unknown dates
- The Russian poet Anna Akhmatova's collection From Six Books appears in the Soviet Union, but distribution is soon suspended, copies pulped and remaining issues prohibited.
- Wills & Hepworth of Loughborough begins publishing Ladybird Books in the United Kingdom in a new format, with Bunnykin's Picnic Party: a story in verse for children with illustrations in colour.
New books
Fiction
Children and young people
Drama
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Non-fiction
Births
- January 4 â Gao Xingjian (é«Âè¡ÂÃ¥ÂÂ¥), Chinese novelist
- January 13 â Edmund White, American writer (died 2025)
- January 15 â Ted Lewis, English novelist (died 1982)
- January 23 â Mario Levrero, Uruguayan novelist (died 2004)
- February 6 â Tom Brokaw, American television journalist and author
- February 8 â Ted Koppel, American journalist
- February 9
- J. M. Coetzee, South African novelist
- Seamus Deane, Irish poet and novelist (died 2021)
- March 16 â Bernardo Bertolucci, Italian writer and film director (died 2018
- March 23 â Ama Ata Aidoo, Ghanaian playwright (died 2023)
- March 28 â Russell Banks, American novelist and poet (died 2023)
- April 6 - Homero Aridjis, Mexican poet, novelist and environmentalist
- April 13 â J. M. G. Le Clézio, French novelist
- April 15 â Jeffrey Archer, English novelist, politician and perjurer
- April 21 â Peter Schneider, German writer (died 2026)
- April 24 â Sue Grafton, American detective novelist (died 2017)
- April 30 â Jeroen Brouwers, Dutch writer (died 2022)
- May 1 â Bobbie Ann Mason, American novelist, short story writer, essayist and literary critic
- May 7 â Angela Carter, English novelist (died 1992)
- May 8 â Peter Benchley, American novelist (died 2006)
- May 13 â Bruce Chatwin, English novelist and travel writer (died 1989)
- May 24 â Joseph Brodsky, Russian-born American poet and essayist (died 1996)
- May 28 â Maeve Binchy, Irish novelist (died 2012)
- July 17 â Tim Brooke-Taylor, English comedy writer and performer (died 2020)
- July 31 â Fleur Jaeggy, Swiss-Italian fiction writer
- September 1 â Annie Ernaux, French author and Nobel laureate
- September 3 â Eduardo Galeano, Uruguayan journalist, writer and novelist (died 2015)
- September 14 â Ventseslav Konstantinov, Bulgarian writer and translator (died 2019)
- October 11 â David McFadden, Canadian poet, fiction and travel writer (died 2018)
- October 15 â Fanny Howe, American poet, novelist and short story writer (died 2025)
- October 20 â Robert Pinsky, American poet
- November 15 â René Avilés Fabila, Mexican writer (died 2016)
- November 20 â Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty, American Indologist and translator
- December 5 â Peter Pohl, Swedish novelist
- December 29 â Brigitte Kronauer, German novelist (died 2019)
- Stan Grant, Wiradjuri Australian writer
Deaths
- January 1 â Panuganti Lakshminarasimha Rao, Indian writer (born 1865)
- January 5 â Humbert Wolfe, British poet and epigrammist (born 1885)
- January 27 â Isaak Babel, Russian journalist and dramatist (executed, born 1894)
- February 11 â John Buchan, Scottish novelist (born 1875)
- February 29
- E. F. Benson, English novelist, biographer, memoirist and short-story writer (born 1867)
- Emma Shaw Colcleugh, American author (born 1846)
- March 7 â Edwin Markham, American poet (born 1852)
- March 10 â Mikhail Bulgakov, Russian novelist and playwright (born 1891)
- March 11 â John Monk Saunders, American writer (suicide, born 1897)
- March 12 â Florence White, English food writer (born 1863)
- March 16
- Sir Thomas Little Heath, English classicist and translator (born 1861)
- Selma Lagerlöf, Swedish children's writer and Nobel laureate (born 1858)
- April 13 â Mary Bathurst Deane, English novelist (born 1843)
- June 1 â Jan F. E. Celliers, South African Afrikaans-language poet, essayist, dramatist and critic (born 1865)
- June 10 â Marcus Garvey, Jamaican journalist and publisher (born 1887)
- June 20 â Charley Chase, American screenwriter (born 1893)
- June 21 â Hendrik Marsman, Dutch poet (born 1899)
- August 4 â Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Russian-born Zionist leader, novelist and poet (heart attack, born 1880)
- August 7 â T. O'Conor Sloane, American editor (born 1851)
- September 8 â Constantin Banu, Romanian politician, journalist, cultural promoter and aphorist (born 1873)
- September 26 â W. H. Davies, Welsh poet (born 1871)
- November 27 â Nicolae Iorga, Romanian historian, politician, culture critic, poet and playwright (assassinated, born 1871)
- December 21 â F. Scott Fitzgerald, American novelist (born 1896)
- December 22 â Nathanael West, American screenwriter and satirist (automobile accident, born 1903)
Awards
References