H.E. Bates

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H.E. Bates


Born
in Rushden, Northamptonshire, England
May 16, 1905

Died
January 29, 1974

Website

Genre


Herbert Ernest Bates, CBE is widely recognised as one of the finest short story writers of his generation, with more than 20 story collections published in his lifetime. It should not be overlooked, however, that he also wrote some outstanding novels, starting with The Two Sisters through to A Moment in Time, with such works as Love For Lydia, Fair Stood the Wind for France and The Scarlet Sword earning high praise from the critics. His study of the Modern Short Story is considered one of the best ever written on the subject.

He was born in Rushden, Northamptonshire and was educated at Kettering Grammar School. After leaving school, he was briefly a newspaper reporter and a warehouse clerk, but his heart was always in writing and his dream
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Average rating: 3.9 · 13,884 ratings · 1,543 reviews · 278 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Darling Buds of May

3.96 avg rating — 3,405 ratings — published 1958
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Fair Stood the Wind for France

3.99 avg rating — 2,165 ratings — published 1944 — 96 editions
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A Breath of French Air

3.93 avg rating — 1,146 ratings — published 1959 — 42 editions
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When the Green Woods Laugh ...

4.01 avg rating — 841 ratings — published 1960 — 46 editions
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Oh! to be in England (The P...

3.99 avg rating — 751 ratings — published 1963 — 32 editions
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Love for Lydia

3.94 avg rating — 749 ratings — published 1952 — 45 editions
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A Little of What You Fancy

3.95 avg rating — 684 ratings — published 1970 — 23 editions
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The Jacaranda Tree

3.53 avg rating — 367 ratings — published 1949 — 35 editions
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The Triple Echo

3.68 avg rating — 274 ratings — published 1970 — 2 editions
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The Purple Plain

3.80 avg rating — 261 ratings — published 1947 — 65 editions
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More books by H.E. Bates…
The Darling Buds of May A Breath of French Air When the Green Woods Laugh Oh! to be in England A Little of What You Fancy The Pop Larkin Chronicles
(6 books)
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3.97 avg rating — 7,041 ratings

My Uncle Silas Sugar for the Horse
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4.02 avg rating — 194 ratings

Quotes by H.E. Bates  (?)
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“It is one of the oddest and sometimes one of the most charming characteristics of English weather that at times one season borrows complete days from another, spring from summer, winter from spring. And it may be that these milky days of winter, which seem borrowed from April, are automatically filled with the sadness of things out of their time.”
H.E. Bates, Through the Woods

“This fusion of wood and water is an entrancing thing. Without the wood the stream would be nothing: a mere thin watercourse winding through its flat meadows. Without the water the wood, on its slope and with its air of quietness and mystery and of being a world within itself, could not help being a constantly delightful thing. But water and wood, together, shading and watering and bounding each other, each give to the other something which the other does not possess, the wood giving to the stream something solid and shadowy and immemorial, the stream giving to the wood all the incomparable movement and twinkling transience of moving water, the tree shadows standing deep in the stream, the reflection of sunlight flickering a kind of waterlight up into the shadowy branches of pine and alder. The wood and the water are here, in fact, one, for each other and with each other. It is a fusion that is almost perfect.”
H.E. Bates, Through the Woods

“Every morning Mrs Eglantine sat at the round bamboo bar of the New Pacific Hotel and drank her breakfast. This consisted of two quick large brandies, followed by several slower ones. By noon breakfast had become lunch and by two o'clock the pouches under and above Mrs Eglantine's bleared blue eyes began to look like large puffed pink prawns.”
H.E. Bates, Seven by Five

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