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Howard Sturgis

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Occupation
  
novelist

Education
  
Eton College

Role
  
Novelist

Name
  
Howard Sturgis

Nationality
  
British


Howard Sturgis Howard Sturgis New York Review Books

Born
  
January 30, 1855 London, England (
1855-01-30
)

Died
  
February 7, 1920, Windsor, United Kingdom

Books
  
Belchamber, Tim, All that was possible, All That Was Possible

Howard Overing Sturgis (January 30, 1855 – February 7, 1920) was an English-language novelist who wrote about same-sex love. Of American parentage, he lived and worked in Britain.

Contents

Howard Sturgis Howard Sturgis Wikipedia

Biography

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Howard Overing Sturgis was born in Britain on 30 January 1855, in London. He was born into an affluent New England American family: his father, Russell Sturgis (1805–1887), was a Boston merchant and lawyer who later became head of Baring's Bank. His mother was Julia Overing née Boit, the third wife of Russell Sturgis. An older half-brother, by Russell Sturgis' second wife Mary Greene Hubbard, was John Hubbard Sturgis. He had a brother, Julian, who also became a novelist. His parents sent him to be educated at Eton College. He went on to study at the University of Cambridge.

He became a friend of the novelists Henry James and Edith Wharton.

After the death of his mother in 1888 he moved with his lover, William Haynes-Smith, into a country house named Queen's Acre, near Windsor Great Park.

Sturgis's first novel, Tim: A Story of School Life (1891), was published anonymously and was dedicated to the "love that surpasses the love of women." It describes the love of two youths at boarding-school. It was followed in 1895 by All that was possible, an epistolary novel about a retired actress. Sturgis's first two novels were successful as far as sales were concerned; but his third, Belchamber (1904), failed to gain the same plaudits. Although Edith Wharton praised it, Henry James found it unsatisfactory, and afterwards Sturgis went on to publish only one short story (1908), about a lesser writer driven suicidal by the criticism of a greater, and a memorial on his friend, Anne Thackeray.

He died on 7 February 1920. After his death appreciations of him were published by A. C. Benson (1924), Edith Wharton (1934), E. M. Forster (1936) and George Santayana (1944), his cousin.His great-nephew is the journalist and novelist Henry Porter (journalist).

Works

  • [Anonymously published], Tim: A Story of School Life (1891)
  • All That Was Possible (1895)
  • Belchamber (1904)
  • 'On the Pottlecombe Cornice', in Fortnightly Review (1908) [short story]
  • References

    Howard Sturgis Wikipedia