Shan Bullock
Shan Fadh Bullock (b. John William, 17 May 1865 – 27 February 1935) was an Irish writer. He was born at Inisherk in Fermanagh and died in Surrey.[1] He attended Farra School in County Westmeath, he failed the Trinity College Dublin entrance exams and moved to London. He served on the secretariat of the Irish Home Rule Convention.[2] He was awarded the Order of the British Empire.
Bullock's works include 14 novels, mostly set in Ulster and examples of rural naturalism, but Robert Thorne: The Story of a London Clerk (1907), like two other novels, was a sortie into Edwardian urban realism. In his rural novels, Bullock, himself born a Protestant (Church of Ireland), portrayed Protestants almost exclusively in the Erne country of County Fermanagh. But he grew up in a religiously mixed district and in Dan the Dollar (1906) he explores what he sees as the opposing psychologies of planter Scots and native Irish. By consensus his best novel is The Loughsiders (1924). His non-fiction work includes a biography of the co-designer of RMS Titanic, Thomas Andrews, Shipbuilder (1912). His fiction has been discussed by John Boyd, Benedict Kiely and John Wilson Foster. [3] He was admired by J. M. Barrie and Thomas Hardy.[4]
Bullock played for the Authors Cricket Club.[5][6]
Works
- The awkward squads and other stories (London : Cassell, 1893.)
- By Thrasna River (London : Ward, Lock & Bowden, 1895.)
- Ring o' rushes (London; New York : Ward, Lock, 1896.)
- The charmer : a seaside comedy (London : J. Bowden, 1897.)
- The Barrys (London; New York : Harper & Brothers, 1899.)
- Irish Pastorals (London : Grant Richards, 1901.)
- The Squireen (London : Methuen, 1903)[7]
- Robert Thorne (London : T. Werner Laurie 1907?)
- Master John (London : Laurie, 1909?)
- Thomas Andrews, shipbuilder (Dublin; and London : Maunsel and company, ltd, 1912.)
- Mors et vita (London : T. Werner Laurie, 1923)
- The Loughsiders (London : G.G. Harrap & co. ltd., 1924.)
- Gleanings (Sutton, Surrey : William Pile, 1926?)
- After sixty years (London : Sampson Low, Marston, 1931?)
References
- ^ Patrick Maume. "Bullock, Shan Fadh (John William)". Dictionary of Irish Biography. (Eds.)James Mcguire, James Quinn. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
- ^ Shan F. Bullock - A Life
- ^ John Boyd, "Ulster Prose" in The Arts in Ulster, eds. Sam Hanna Bell, Nesca A. Robb, John Hewitt (London: Harrap, 1951); Benedict Kiely, "Orange Lily in a Green Garden", The Irish Times, 29 Dec. 1972; John Wilson Foster, Forces and Themes in Ulster Fiction (Rowman and Littlefield, 1974), pp. 29-36; Irish Novels 1890-1940: New Bearings in Culture and Fiction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 147-148, 155, 169-70.
- ^ "Mr. Shan F. Bullock, Irish Novelist and Poet [Obituary]". The Times: 17. 28 February 1935.
- ^ "Authors v Publishers". Cricket Archive. Retrieved 18 April 2019. 21 August 1912 match.
- ^ Wodehouse, P. G. (2011). Hedgcock, Murray (ed.). Wodehouse at the Wicket. Arrow Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-0099551362.
- ^ "Review of The Squireen by Shan F. Bullock". The Athenaeum (3942): 620. 16 May 1903.
External links
- Works by Shan Bullock at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Shan Bullock at the Internet Archive
- Shan Bullock Manuscript Collection at Queen's University Belfast
- Works by Shan Bullock at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)