Stern, James, 1904-1993
Variant namesBiographical notes:
Irish author and translator who corresponded with Djuna Barnes.
From the description of Papers. 1940-1986. (University of Maryland Libraries). WorldCat record id: 36326138
James Andrew Stern, author, was born on December 26, 1904, in County Meath, Ireland. He attended Eaton and Sandhurst.
The author of more than fifty short stories, his works included The Heartless Land (1932); Something Wrong (1938); The Hidden Damage (1947) (written after viewing the damage wrought by World War II as a member of the Strategic Bombing Survey in Germany); The Man Who Was Loved (1952); The Stories of James Stern (1969); and Thank You Fog (1974). Together with his wife, Constanze (Tania) Kurella, whom he married in 1935, Stern translated from German the works of Franz Kafka; Bertolt Brecht; Thomas Mann; Erich Maria Remarque; Hugo von Hofmannsthal; and Sigmund Freud. Mr. Stern also wrote for numerous newspapers and magazines including New Yorker ; London Magazine ; Irish Times ; Harper's Magazine ; Nation ; and New Republic .
Mr. Stern also worked as a bartender, pig farmer, cattle rancher, and steeplechase rider. He died on November 22, 1993, at the age of eighty-eight.
From the guide to the James Stern papers, 1940-1986, 1940-1986, (Literature and Rare Books)
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- Authors, American