Edward Shanks
Edward Richard Buxton Shanks was an English writer, known as a war poet of World War I, then as an academic and journalist, and literary critic and biographer. He also wrote some science fiction.
He was born in London, and educated at Merchant Taylors' School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He passed his B.A. in history in 1913. He was editor of Granta from 1912 to 1913. He served in World War I with the British Army in France, but was invalided out in 1915, and did administrative work until war's end.
He was later a literary reviewer, working for the London Mercury and for a short while a lecturer at the University of Liverpool. He was the chief leader-writer for the Evening Standard from 1928 to 1935.
The People of the Ruins was a science-fiction novel in which a man wakes after being put into suspended animation in 1924, to discover a devastated Britain 150 years in the future. The People of the Ruins has an anti-communist subtext.
Awards and honors
He was the first recipient of the Hawthornden Prize in 1919.Works
- Songs poems
- Hilaire Belloc, the man and his work with C. Creighton Mandell
- Poems
- The Queen of China and Other Poems poems
- The Old Indispensables novel
- The People of the Ruins novel at Project Gutenberg Australia
- The Island of Youth and Other Poems poems
- The Richest Man novel
- First Essays on Literature criticism
- Fête Galante opera libretto
- Bernard Shaw criticism
- The Shadowgraph and Other Poems
- Collected Poems
- The Beggar's Ride drama
- Second Essays on Literature criticism
- Queer Street
- The Enchanted Village
- Poems 1912–1932
- Tom Tiddler's Ground
- Old King Cole novel
- Edgar Allan Poe
- My England
- Rudyard Kipling – A Study in Literature and Political Ideas
- ''Poems 1939–1952''