Walter Greenwood
Walter Greenwood (December 17, 1903 September 13, 1974) was an English novelist, best known for the socially influential novel Love on the Dole (1933).
Related Topics:
December 17 - 1903 - September 13 - 1974 - English - Love on the Dole - 1933
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Greenwood was born in Hankinson Park, Salford in Greater Manchester, the son of radical working class parents. Like many children he left school at the age of 13. He took a succession of low paid jobs, and continued to educated himself in Salford Public Library. During periods of unemployment he worked for the local Labour Party and began to write short stories.
Related Topics:
Hankinson Park - Salford - Greater Manchester - Working class - Labour Party
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While unemployed he wrote his first novel Love on the Dole in 1932, about the destructive social effects of poverty in his home town. After several rejections, it was published in 1933. It was a critical and commercial success, and a huge influence on the British public's view of unemployment. It meant Greenwood would not have to worry about his own employment again. He stayed in Salford for a while, and served on the council, but soon moved to London. In 1937 he married Pearl Alice Osgood, an American actress and dancer.
Related Topics:
Love on the Dole - 1932 - Poverty - 1933 - Unemployment - Council
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Although he never matched the success of Love on the Dole, he produced a succession of novels during the 1930s: His Worship the Major (1934), The Time is Ripe (1935), Standing Room Only (1936), Cleft Stick (1937), Only Mugs Work (1938), The Secret Kingdom (1938) and How the other Man Lives (1939). He also co-wrote a George Formby film, No Limit (1935).
Related Topics:
Love on the Dole - 1930s - George Formby
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During the Second World War Greenwood produced films for the British government, and served in the Royal Army Service Corp. 1944 saw the publication of Something in my Heart, and the end of his marriage to Pearl.
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After the war he wrote the Trelooe trilogy So Brief the Spring (1952), What Everybody Wants (1954) and Down by the Sea (1956) and a few plays: Cure for Love (1947, filmed 1950), Too Clever for Love (1952) and Saturday Night at the Crown (1958). He retired to Douglas on the Isle of Man in the 1950s, and wrote his autobiography, There Was A Time (1967). After he died his manuscripts and letters were bequeathed to Salford University.
Related Topics:
Douglas - Isle of Man
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