George Stanley Godwin Explained

George Stanley Godwin (1889 - 1974) was an English writer of fiction and non-fiction books.

Childhood and youth

George S. Godwin was born in London, England, the youngest boy of a large family, and was only three years old when his father died. He was educated at boarding schools. Failing his studies at college he spent a couple of years in Germany.[1] After returning to England Godwin reportedly worked briefly for a German bank in England. In the spring of 1909 he was admitted to membership of the Middle Temple and started studying law. His mother died in 1910.[2]

Whonnock years

In September 1911 Godwin, then age 22, left for British Columbia, Canada,[3] where one of his brothers managed a real estate agency.[4] George Godwin was employed as "real estate broker" with the agency, but that ended with the arrival of his future wife, Dorothy Alicia Purdon from Ireland.[5] They married in the spring of 1912 [6] and moved to acreage in Whonnock, British Columbia. Godwin’s dreams of living off the land did not materialize. Godwin's first novel, The Eternal Forest (1929), was inspired by his years in Whonnock.

War years

At the outbreak of the First World War, Godwin wanted to join the Canadian armed forces, but was rejected for active service because of poor eyesight. He returned with his wife and son to England in 1915,[7] where he joined the Canadian Expeditionary Force after all and embarked for France in September 1916 with the 29th Vancouver Battalion. In the summer of 1917, after suffering a "severe cold" in France the previous winter, Godwin was hospitalized in England. He did not return to France but was assigned to a different Canadian unit in Britain. In December 1918, diagnosed with pulmonary tuberculosis, he was shipped to Canada and placed in the Balfour Military Sanatorium in the West Kootenay, BC, for recovery.[8] Godwin returned to England and his family in the summer of 1920.[9] His second novel, Why Stay We Here? (1932), closely follows Godwin's own wartime experiences. This book starts and ends at the same community described in The Eternal Forest.

Freelancer, author, and publisher

Although Godwin was called to the bar in the fall of 1917 (in absentia)[10] he did not pursue a career in law.[11] During his stay in British Columbia, Godwin had freelanced for Vancouver newspapers and upon his return to England writing became his profession. He made a good income mostly as freelance for newspapers, magazines and publicity people. That allowed the family some luxury and his five children the education they desired.[12] Aside from freelancing, the main source of his income, Godwin wrote a good number of fiction and non-fiction books. His efforts in publishing, started in the mid 1930s under the style The Acorn Press, ended because of the paper shortage of the war years.[13] [14] Godwin tried to enlist with the army, was rejected, but found employment writing for the War Office.

After the Second World War

Godwin resumed his work as a writer and freelancer. Starting in the fall of 1949 he was for a year the editor of the literary quarterly The Adelphi. Godwin and his wife spent their final years in Sussex in a house that combined two old cottages with a modern extension. Their property included seven acres of woodland as well as an established orchard.[15] Godwin continued writing and had plans for another book[16] but that did not materialize. His last book was published in 1957.

Bibliography

Fiction

Biography

Play

Non-fiction

Aside from George Godwin's Peter Kürten, a study in sadism, The Acorn Press also published in 1938 The Sadist, an account of the crimes of Peter Kürten, by Karl Berg. Authorized translation by Olga Illmer and George Godwin. 177 pp. This book was re-issued in 1945 by The Medical Press in New York and Heinemann in London.

External links

Notes and References

  1. From George Godwin's personal notes published in part in The Eternal Forest (1994), edited by Robert S. Thomson.
  2. England & Wales, National Probate Register.
  3. Passenger list SS Empress of Canada, Arrival Quebec 29 September 1911.
  4. Coquitlam Real Estate Co. Ltd. William Donald Free Godwin migrated to Canada in 1905.
  5. Passenger list ss Lake Manitoba, arrival Quebec City 2 May 1912.
  6. BC Marriage Registration Number 1912–09–123771
  7. No record found of their voyage but since their (only) daughter Mary Monica was born in Dublin on 29 January 1916 a departure in the latter part of 1915 is certain.
  8. Library and Archives Canada: RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 3637 – 13.
  9. Passenger list ss Scotian, arrival London 24 August 1920.
  10. LW, Archivist, The Middle Temple, 13 January 2015.
  11. Letter Godwin to J.S. (Ted) Roberts, 10 May 1964. Courtesy Lucy Godwin.
  12. Letter Godwin to Dr Ethlyn Trapp 22 June 1940, Vancouver City Archives, Reference code AM211.
  13. Letter Godwin to Dr Ethlyn Trapp, 22 June 1940, Vancouver City Archives, Reference code AM211.
  14. In 1946 the artist Hellmuth Weissenborn and his wife Lesley Macdonald, a publisher, took over the imprint of The Acorn Press in London. Ziata Fyss Phillips German Children's and Youth Literature in Exile, München, 2001.
  15. Letter Godwin to Dr. Ethlyn Trapp, 10 May 1970, Vancouver City Archives, Reference code AM211
  16. "It is now more than two years since I began to write a book, and it has still some way to go." Letter Godwin to Dr. Ethlyn Trapp, 10 May 1970, Vancouver City Archives, Reference code AM211