1941 in literature


This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1941.

Events

Uncertain dates

Fiction


  • Jean Anouilh
  • *Eurydice
  • *:fr:Le Rendez-vous de Senlis|Le Rendez-vous de Senlis
  • Bertolt Brecht
  • *Mother Courage and Her Children
  • *The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui
  • Noël Coward – Blithe Spirit
  • Kenneth HorneLove in a Mist
  • Molly KeaneDucks and Drakes
  • Esther McCracken – Quiet Weekend
  • Pablo Picasso – Desire Caught by the Tail
  • Enrique Jardiel Poncela – We Thieves Are Honourable
  • Vernon Sylvaine
  • *Warn That Man!
  • *Women Aren't Angels
  • Xavier Villaurrutia – Invitación à la muerte

    Poetry

  • W. H. Auden – New Year Letter
  • William Rose Benét – The Dust which is God
  • Laurence Binyon – The North Star and Other Poems
  • T. S. Eliot – The Dry Salvages
  • A Choice of Kipling's Verse by T. S. Eliot
  • G. S. Fraser – The Fatal Landscape and Other Poems
  • Patrick Kavanagh – The Great Hunger
  • John Gillespie Magee, Jr. – "High Flight"
  • John Pudney – "For Johnny"

    Non-fiction

  • Frank Buck with Ferrin FraserAll in a Lifetime
  • George Călinescu – Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent
  • Joyce Cary
  • *The Case for African Freedom
  • *A House of Children
  • Leonora Eyles – For My Enemy Daughter
  • Victor Gollancz – Russia and Ourselves
  • Louis MacNeice – The Poetry of W. B. Yeats
  • The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
  • Vita Sackville-West – English Country Houses
  • Antal Szerb – A világirodalom története
  • Robert Vansittart – Black Record. Germans Past and Present
  • Rebecca West – Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: a journey through Yugoslavia
  • Stefan Zweig – Brasilien. Ein Land der Zukunft

    Births

  • January 19 – Colin Gunton, English theologian and academic
  • January 24 – Gary K. Wolf, American humorist
  • March 13
  • *Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian poet
  • *Donella Meadows, American environmentalist
  • March 22 – Billy Collins, American poet
  • April 10 – Paul Theroux, American novelist and travel writer
  • May 13 – Miles Kington, Northern Irish-born humorist and journalist
  • May 19 – Nora Ephron, American novelist and screenwriter
  • May 24 – Bob Dylan, born Robert Allen Zimmerman, American singer-songwriter, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature
  • June 5 – Spalding Gray, American screenwriter and dramatist
  • June 27 – James P. Hogan, English-born American science fiction author
  • July 12 – John Lahr, American-born author and critic
  • August 9
  • *Shirlee Busbee, American novelist
  • *Jamila Gavin, Anglo-Indian children's writer
  • September 1 – Gwendolyn MacEwen, Canadian poet
  • September 3 – Sergei Dovlatov, Russian short-story writer and novelist
  • September 15 – Lindsay Barrett, Jamaican novelist, poet and journalist
  • October 2 – John Sinclair, American poet
  • October 4 – Anne Rice, American horror/fantasy writer
  • October 10 – Ken Saro-Wiwa, Nigerian writer
  • October 13 – John Snow, English cricketer and poet
  • October 20 – Stewart Parker, Northern Irish poet and playwright
  • October 25 – Anne Tyler, American novelist
  • October 27 – Gerd Brantenberg, Norwegian novelist, author and feminist
  • December 5 – Sheridan Morley, English biographer and critic
Uncertain dates
Uncertain date
  • Anne Elliot, English novelist

    Awards

  • Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Mary Treadgold, We Couldn't Leave Dinah
  • Frost Medal: Robert Frost
  • James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Joyce Cary, A House of Children
  • James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: John Gore, King George V
  • Newbery Medal for children's literature: Armstrong Sperry, Call It Courage
  • Nobel Prize for literature: not awarded
  • Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Robert E. Sherwood, There Shall Be No Night
  • Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Leonard Bacon: Sunderland Capture
  • Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: No award given

    In literature

  • September – Michael Frayn's play Copenhagen concerns the meeting of Werner Heisenberg with Niels Bohr.
  • November
  • *Len Deighton's alternate history novel SS-GB opens in an occupied London.
  • *Rachel Seiffert's novel A Boy in Winter is set in the Ukraine during Operation Barbarossa.
  • December – Martin Cruz Smith's thriller December 6 is set in Tokyo on the eve of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
  • Michael Moorcock's alternate history steampunk novel The Steel Tsar is set during an alternate war.