Norah Hoult
Eleanor Norah Hoult (10 September 1898 – 6 April 1984) was an Irish writer of novels and short stories.
Hoult was born in Dublin.[1] Her mother, Margaret O'Shaughnessy, was a Catholic who eloped at the age of 21 with a Protestant English architect named Powis Hoult.[1] Both Hoult's parents died while she was still a child, and she and her brother were sent to live with their father's relations in England, where they were educated in various boarding schools.[1][2][3]
Her first book, Poor Women!, appeared in 1928.[3] This collection of five short stories received critical praise, and has been reprinted several times, both individually and in selected editions.[4] It was followed by a novel, Time Gentlemen! Time! (1930), which deals with a woman's unhappy marriage to an alcoholic.
Hoult married the writer Oliver Stonor, and lived with him at The Cottage in Windsor Great Park for a year; the marriage was dissolved in 1934.[1] She returned to Ireland to collect material for her writing in 1931, and remained there until 1937, when she moved to New York for two years.[1] Her next two books, Holy Ireland (1935) and its sequel Coming from the Fair (1937), show Irish family life before World War I.[5]
In 1939 she settled in London, in Bayswater, not far from Violet Hunt upon whom Claire Temple in There Were No Windows (1944) is modelled.[3] In 1957 she returned to live in Ireland.[1]
In 1977 she published her last book.[3] She died at Jonquil Cottage, Greystones, County Wicklow, on April 6, 1984.[3]
Hoult was a friend of the Scottish writer Fred Urquhart and some of their correspondence is preserved in his archive.[6]
Critics have described Hoult's work as "overlooked" and "neglected"; Nicola Beauman is quoted as saying Hoult "is a very good example of a woman writer who falls completely out of fashion and is forgotten. She was an absolutely brilliant writer and well-known at the time in a way she isn’t now”.[1][2][4]
Works
- Poor Women! (short stories, 1928)
- Time Gentlemen! Time! (1930) [published in the U.S. as Closing Time]
- Violet Ryder (from Poor Women!, 1930)
- Apartments to Let (1931)
- Youth Can't Be Served (1933)
- Holy Ireland (1935)
- Coming from the Fair (1937)
- Nine Years is a Long Time (short stories, 1938)
- Smilin' on the Vine (1939)
- Four Women Grow Up (1940)
- Augusta Steps Out (1942)
- Scene for Death (1943)
- There Were No Windows (1944) (Republished in 2005 by Persephone Books)
- House Under Mars (1946)
- Farewell Happy Fields (1948)
- Cocktail Bar (short stories, 1950)
- Frozen Ground (autobiography, 1952)
- Sister Mavis (1953)
- A Death Occurred (1954)
- Journey Into Print (1954)
- Father Hone and the Television Set (1956)
- Father and Daughter (1957)
- Husband and Wife (1959)
- The Last Days of Miss Jenkinson (1962)
- A Poet's Pilgrimage (1966)
- Only Fools and Horses Work (1969)
- Not For Our Sins Alone (1972)
- Two Girls in the Big Smoke (1977)
References
- Gleeson, Sinéad (24 March 2018). "Why has Norah Hoult been overlooked?". Irish Times. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- Gleeson, Sinéad (10 September 2015). "A long gaze back at Norah Hoult on her 117th birthday". Irish Times. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- "Norah Hoult". Persephone Books. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
- Costello-Sullivan, Kathleen P (2016). "Norah Hoult's 'Poor Women!'". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- Reynolds, Horace (16 February 1936). "A Good Novel of Dublin Life; Norah Hoult's "Holy Ireland" Is a Notable Advance Over the Books That Followed Her First Novel, "Poor Women"". New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- "Fred Urquhart: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Center". University of Texas. Retrieved 27 September 2017.