H. M. Tomlinson Explained

Henry Major Tomlinson (21 June 1873 – 5 February 1958) was a British writer and journalist. He was known for anti-war and travel writing, novels and short stories, especially of life at sea. He was born and died in London.[1]

Life

Tomlinson was brought up in Poplar, London. He worked as a shipping clerk, and then as a reporter for the Morning Leader newspaper; he travelled up the Amazon River for it.

In World War I he was an official correspondent for the British Army, in France. In 1917 he returned to work with H. W. Massingham on The Nation, which opposed the war. He left the paper in 1923, when Massingham resigned because of a change of owner and political line. His 1931 book Norman Douglas was one of the first biographies of that scandalous but then much admired writer.

On 26 December 1899, at Stephen's, Poplar, he married Florence Margaret, daughter of Thomas Hammond, a sailmaker, of Pekin Street, Poplar, by whom he had a son and two daughters.

Works

Reception

Tomlinson was much admired in the 1920s.[2] In 1921, Christopher Morley praised what he saw as the "exquisite, considered prose" to be found in Tomlinson's 1918 book of essays, Old Junk:

How direct and satisfying a passage to the mind Mr. Tomlinson's paragraphs have. How they build and cumulate, how the sentences shift, turn and move in delicate loops and ridges under the blowing wind of thought, like the sand of the dunes that he describes in one essay.[3]
Frederic P. Mayer, however, writing in the Virginia Quarterly Review, expressed a less admiring view:[4]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/598982/H-M-Tomlinson H. M. Tomlinson (English writer) – Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. News: The New York Times . London Acclaims Mr. Tomlinson . 25 September 1927 . 9 October 2012 . Horwill, Herbert W..
  3. https://archive.org/details/modernessays00morluoft/page/210/mode/1up?view=theater Morley, Christopher, ed., Modern Essays, p.210 (New York 1921).
  4. Frederick P. Mayer, 1928.