J. A. Cuddon Explained

J. A. Cuddon
Birth Name:John Anthony Bowden Cuddon
Birth Date:2 June 1928
Birth Place:United Kingdom
Death Place:United Kingdom
Occupation:Author
Language:English
Nationality:British
Citizenship:United Kingdom
Genres:Fiction, non-fiction, dictionary
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John Anthony Bowden Cuddon (2 June 1928 – 12 March 1996), was an English author, dictionary writer, and school teacher. He is known best for his Dictionary of Literary Terms (published in several editions), described by the Times Educational Supplement as ‘scholarly, succinct, comprehensive and entertaining…an indispensable work of reference.’ Cuddon also wrote The Macmillan Dictionary of Sport and Games, a two million-word account of most of the world's sports and games through history, as well as several novels, plays, travel books, and other published works. Cuddon's The Owl's Watchsong was a study of Istanbul.[1]

Cuddon also edited two important anthologies of supernatural fictionThe Penguin Book of Ghost Stories and The Penguin Book of Horror Stories (both 1984).

In his distinguished teaching career at Emanuel School in London, England, he taught English. He also coached rugby and cricket.

Bibliography

Novels

A Multitude of Sins (1961)

Testament of Iscariot (1962)

The Acts of Darkness (1963)

The Six Wounds (1964)

The Bride of Battersea (1967)

Non-fiction

The Owl's Watchsong (1960)

The Companion Guide to Yugoslavia (1974)

A Dictionary of Literary Terms (1977)

The Macmillan Dictionary of Sport and Games (1980)

The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories (1984) (editor)

The Penguin Book of Horror Stories (1984) (editor)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Richard Stoneman, Across the Hellespont: A Literary Guide to Turkey. London; Tauris Parke Paperbacks, 2010, (p. 240).