James Hanley | |
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Born | Kirkdale, Liverpool, Lancashire, England | 3 September 1897
Died | 11 November 1985 London, England | (aged 88)
Resting place | Llanfechain, Powys, Wales |
Occupation | Novelist, playwright, radio and television dramatist, and short story writer |
Literary movement | Expressionism, Modernism, English literature, Welsh literature in English |
Notable works | Boy, The Furys, The Closed Harbour, Levine |
Spouse | Dorothy Enid "Timothy" Thomas (née Heathcote) |
James (Joseph) Hanley (3 September 1897 – 11 November 1985) was a British novelist, short story writer, and playwright from Kirkdale, Liverpool, Lancashire, of Irish descent. Hanley came from a seafaring family and spent two years at sea himself, during World War I. He published his first novel Drift in 1930. In the 1930s and 1940s his novels and short stories focussed on seamen and their families, and included Boy (1931), the subject of an obscenity trial. After World War II there was less emphasis on the sea in his works. While frequently praised by critics, Hanley's novels did not sell well. In the late 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s he wrote plays, mainly for the BBC, for radio and then for television, and also for the theatre. He returned to the novel in the 1970s. His last novel, A Kingdom, was published in 1978, when he was eighty. His brother Gerald was also a novelist.