Hector Bolitho
(Henry) Hector Bolitho (28 May 1897 – 12 September 1974) was a New Zealand author, novelist and biographer, who had 59 books published. Widely-travelled, he spent most of his career in England.
Biography
Hector Bolitho was born and educated in Auckland, New Zealand, the son of Henry and Ethelred Frances Bolitho. He travelled in the South Sea Islands in 1919 and then through New Zealand with the Prince of Wales in 1920.
Bolitho lived in Sydney from 1921 to 1923,[1] where he became editor of the Shakespearean Quarterly and literary editor and drama critic of the Evening News in Sydney.[2]
He also travelled in Africa, Canada, America, and Germany in 1923-4, finally settling in Britain where he was to remain for the rest of his life.
On his arrival in Britain he worked as a freelance journalist. At the start of World War II he joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (RAFVR) as an intelligence officer with the rank of squadron leader, editing the Royal Air Force Weekly Bulletin, which in 1941 became the Royal Air Force Journal. In 1942 he was appointed editor of the Coastal Command Intelligence Review.
Bolitho undertook several lecture tours of America (in 1938-39, 1947, 1948, and 1949) and he also revisited Australia in later years.[1]
Bolitho was homosexual and was in a long-term relationship with Derek Peel, an army officer, from 1949 until Bolitho's death in 1974.
The name Bolitho is of Cornish origin.[3]
Bibliography
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References
- 1 2 "Hector Bolito". AustLit. Retrieved 4 May 2014.
- ↑ Michael Thornton, ‘Bolitho, (Henry) Hector (1897–1974)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 4 May 2014
- ↑ http://www.gould.com.au/Cornish-Family-Names-p/thp009.htm
External links
- Dictionary of National Biography
- Hector Bolitho at Dunedin Public Library website
- World War I New Zealand Army military personnel file
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