Walter Ernest Allen was an English literary critic and novelist and one of the Birmingham Group of authors. He is best known for his classic study The English Novel: a Short Critical History.
Life and career
Allen was born in Aston, Birmingham; he drew on his working-class roots for All in a Lifetime, generally considered his best novel. He was educated at King Edward's Grammar School and the University of Birmingham, graduating in 1932—his friends at that period included Henry Reed and Louis MacNeice. He taught and took numerous temporary academic positions. In 1935, he was a Visiting Lecturer in English in University of Iowa, Iowa city; from 1955-56 he was Visiting Professor of English at Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; from 1963-64 he was Visiting Professor of English, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York, and in 1967 he was at University of Kansas, Lawrence, and University of Washington, Seattle. He also worked in journalism, being at one time literary editor of the New Statesman; and was a broadcaster. In 1967 he took a position as Professor of English Studies at the New University of Ulster. Allen published many novels early in his career mostly dealing with life of the working class in England. As I Walked down New Grub Street which accounts his meetings with prominent literary figures was published in 1982. After a significant break from fiction-writing for 27 years he published Get Out Early in 1986. He was known as an editor of George Gissing. He wrote some poetry, which appeared in John Lehmann's publications in the 1940s. He left much writing in manuscript. He died in London.
Works
Novels
Innocence is Drowned
Blind Man's Ditch
Living Space
The Black Country
Rogue Elephant
Dead Man Over All
All in a Lifetime
Get Out Early
Accosting Profiles
Short stories
The Festive Baked-Potato Cart
Criticism
Writers on Writing, editor
Reading a Novel
Arnold Bennett
Joyce Cary
The English Novel; a Short Critical History
The Novel Today
Six Great Novelists
George Eliot
Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our Time