Kent Literature

Kent Literature

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M R James: Goodnestone and Ghosts

The first encounter with the short ghost stories of Montague Rhodes James (1862-1936) is very similar to the usual pattern of the tales he tells. Usually located in reassuringly secure environments – libraries, college quads, gardens, comfortable old buildings thoroughly inhabited and domesticated – these are slowly but surely undermined Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 8, 2020 ago
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Mary Tourtel: Bears and Canterbury

The local heritage museum celebrating the creation of Rupert Bear in Canterbury closed in 2018. This was unfortunate, in and of itself, but also symbolically, because it was just two years shy of the centenary of the first date the cartoon bear had appeared, in November 2020 in the Daily Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 7, 2020 ago
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Hilaire Belloc: `The Old Road’ and the Pilgrims’ Way

The Anglo-French writer Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc (1870-1953) remains best known today as the author of the 1907 `Cautionary Tales for Children’ with its often comically violent accounts of what happens to misbehaving youngsters. Belloc, son of a French father and English mother, produced more than 150 books, and Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 6, 2020 ago
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Arthur Conan Doyle: Murderous Groombridge

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) continues to enjoy global fame through his creation, Sherlock Holmes, based, according to his own words, on Joseph Bell, a teacher at his university while studying medicine in Edinburgh in the 1880s. Doyle’s life was an extraordinary mixture. He practiced medicine, played football for Portsmouth Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 5, 2020 ago
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John Buchan: Stepping out in Broadstairs

John Buchan (1875-1940) is regarded as the father of the modern spy novel, and exercised a huge influence over the young Ian Fleming.  His celebrated `The Thirty-Nine Steps’  (1915) captured the admiration of no less a figure than Alfred Hitchcock who rendered it into film in 1935. It was filmed Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 3, 2020 ago
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Elizabeth Bowen: Hythe Haven

Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973) was one of the finest short story writers and novelists of the twentieth century in English.  Her writing, ironic, subtle, often conveying in a single line enough for a whole chapter about the characters she describes, shifts between the landscape of her native Ireland, and the London Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 2, 2020 ago
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George Orwell: Kent and the Ordeal of Hop-Picking

If Edmund Blunden and Siegfried Sassoon celebrated the softer side of the Kentish countryside in some of their works, contrasting it with their searing memories of the First World War (with H E Bates a little later chipping in), George Orwell’s brief, but formative, experience of hop picking in Kent Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsJune 1, 2020 ago
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Matthew Arnold: Dover and `Dover Beach’

Matthew Arnold (1822-1888), social and literary critic, educationalist, and poet, is linked to Kent by one poem, but, just as is the case with Ben Jonson and his `To Penshurst’ from over two hundred year previously, an extremely important one. `Dover Beach’ (1851) must be one of the most anthologised Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsMay 31, 2020 ago
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Richard Barham: Denton, Tappington Everard Hall and Early Victorian Lore of Kent

While they are still available in print, it is more likely that those who want to get a copy of the `Ingoldsby Legends’  by the reverend Richard Barham (1788-1845), written under the pseudonym Thomas Ingoldsby, are more likely to pick this up in a second hand bookshop. The stories enjoyed Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsMay 30, 2020 ago
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William Hazlitt: Maidstone’s Passionate Essayist

Along Earl Street, in the centre of Maidstone, and by the local theatre, a small pedestrian alleyway runs from here to the parallel High Street. On the left of this opposite the arcades and the sheltered walkway underneath is a red bricked building, marked as a unitarian chapel. The pastor Read more…

By kerry.brown01, 5 yearsMay 29, 2020 ago

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