Mannin, Ethel, 1900-1984
Variant names
English
Biographical notes:
The oldest of three children, Ethel Edith Mannin was born on October 11, 1900 in Clapham, a suburb of London, to Robert Mannin and Edith Gray Mannin. She was author of almost one hundred books (her goal was to publish one novel and one work of nonfiction each year). She published novels, travelogues, autobiographies, children's books, collections of short stories, books on child-rearing, and articles on pacifism and the Arab-Israeli conflict. Her journalistic career began at age seventeen, when she became the associate editor of The Pelican, a theatrical and sporting periodical, and held that position until 1919, when the magazine ceased publication. That same year, Mannin married John Alexander Porteous. Together, they had one child, Jean. Mannin spent very little time with her husband, preferring the company and lifestyle of her literary and left-leaning political friends, and they later divorced. In 1938, Mannin married Reginald Reynolds, a Quaker peace activist and friend of Mahatma Gandhi.
Mannin's first novel, Martha, was a runner-up in a competition for first novels, and was published by the contest's sponsors in 1923. Her first commercially and critically successful novel was Sounding Brass (1925). Mannin's satirical look at life in the twenties was based on her experience in the London advertising world. Critics often compared it to Sinclair Lewis's Main Street and Babbitt. One of her most popular novels was Late Have I Loved Thee (1948) which depicted a man's conversion to Catholicism and vocation to the priesthood. Mannin was often praised for her superior character development. She wanted to portray characters whom she described as "real people" who "eluded class distinctions." Critics often faulted her writing for being too concerned with her own personal political and social views, making her novels propagandistic. Her novels often dealt with contemporary events, such as The Road to Beersheba, which was a response to Leon Uris's popular and pro-Israeli novel Exodus. She was fervently anti-Zionist and very concerned over the plight of Palestinian refugees.
Even Mannin's nonfiction became controversial. E.F. Allen of the New York Times described her book Forever Wandering as a "travel notebook of a British novelist, who takes for granted that the world is interested in her observations and reaction...Although [she] is opinionated to point of irritation, she is honest in her attitudes and exuberant in her style or writing." Her first autobiographical work, Confessions and Impressions, was considered shocking at the time of its publication in 1930. The work, which included detailed accounts of extramarital affairs, caused an immediate scandal and earned her a reputation as an "angry woman." The book was written in part to scandalize the older generation and upset their conservative social values. Her profession of modernist sexual mores and advocacy of leftist causes gave Mannin a reputation as being both bohemian and risqué.
Though Mannin's permanent residence was England (for much of her life in Wimbledon and later in Devon), Mannin also maintained a cottage in Connemara, Ireland. One of her more well-known works was Connemara Journal (1947), an account of Mannin's pleasure in her isolated existence in Ireland. Her father was of Irish descent and she had a lifelong fondness for Ireland and all things Irish.
Mannin died in 1984 after a decline subsequent to fracturing her pelvis.
Epithet: author
British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000471.0x000359
Epithet: Subject of Mss Eur D950
British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000001347.0x000077
Links to collections
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940. Emma Goldman papers, 1903-1940, bulk (1919-1940).
New York Public Library System, NYPL
Mannin, Ethel, 1900-1984. Ethel Mannin - Gilbert Turner Papers, 1922-1981, (bulk 1943-1981).
Boston College. John J. Burns Library
Mannin, Ethel, 1900-1984. Ethel Mannin - Robert Huxter Papers, 1958-1989, (bulk 1964-1981).
Boston College. John J. Burns Library
Ethel Mannin papers
Boston College. John J. Burns Library
Mannin, Ethel, 1900-1984. Letter : Oak Cottage, Burghley Road, London, [to E. H. Rasdall?] 1950 Sept. 30.
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Mannin, Ethel, 1900-1984. Ethel Mannin collection, 1908-1981.
Boston University. School of Medicine
Katin, Louis,. Letters, 1932-1936.
Houghton Library
Reynolds, Ethel Mannin. Letter to [?] Windsor-Garnett. London, Eng. 1939 Nov. 27.
University of Iowa Libraries
Emma Goldman papers, 1903-1940, 1919-1940
New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division
Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960. Douglas Goldring fonds. [1900-1964].
University of Victoria Libraries, UVic
Papers of Verrier Elwin, anthropologist, 1924-1964
British Library
William Ernest Hocking papers
Houghton Library
Lawlor, Patrick Anthony. Correspondence on Katherine Mansfield, 1938-1966.
Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University Libraries
Letters, 1932-1936.
Houghton Library
Louise Morgan and Otto Theis papers, 1903-1983 (inclusive, 1930-1960
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Donald and Katharine Foley Collection of Penguin Books, 1935-1965
Bancroft Library
Related names in SNAC
associatedWith
Browne, Maurice, 1881-1955.
associatedWith
Faulks, Jean.
associatedWith
Foley, Donald L.
associatedWith
Foley, Katharine
associatedWith
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940
associatedWith
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940.
associatedWith
Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960.
associatedWith
Gow, Ronald.
associatedWith
Harris, Frank, 1855-1931
correspondedWith
Hocking, William Ernest, 1873-1966
correspondedWith
Huxter, Robert
associatedWith
Katin, Louis,
correspondedWith
Katin, Louis, recipient.
associatedWith
Lawlor, Patrick Anthony.
associatedWith
Loraine, Lorn.
associatedWith
Morgan, Louise.
associatedWith
Morgan, Louise.
associatedWith
Morris, Lewis, 1833-1907.
associatedWith
Rasdall, E. H. (Ernest H.).
spouseOf
Reynolds, Reginald, 1905-1958
correspondedWith
Reynolds, Reginald, 1905-1958
associatedWith
Turner, Gilbert, 1911-
associatedWith
Browne, Maurice, 1881-1955.
associatedWith
Faulks, Jean.
associatedWith
Foley, Donald L.
associatedWith
Foley, Katharine
associatedWith
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940
associatedWith
Goldman, Emma, 1869-1940.
associatedWith
Goldring, Douglas, 1887-1960.
associatedWith
Gow, Ronald.
associatedWith
Harris, Frank, 1855-1931
correspondedWith
Hocking, William Ernest, 1873-1966
correspondedWith
Huxter, Robert
associatedWith
Katin, Louis,
correspondedWith
Katin, Louis, recipient.
associatedWith
Lawlor, Patrick Anthony.
associatedWith
Loraine, Lorn.
associatedWith
Morgan, Louise.
associatedWith
Morgan, Louise.
associatedWith
Morris, Lewis, 1833-1907.
associatedWith
Rasdall, E. H. (Ernest H.).
spouseOf
Reynolds, Reginald, 1905-1958
correspondedWith
Reynolds, Reginald, 1905-1958
associatedWith
Turner, Gilbert, 1911-
Collection Locations
no collection locations known
Comparison
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Subjects:
- Authors, British
- Authors, Irish
- Dramatists, English
- English literature
Occupations:
- Author
- Journalist
- Women authors, English
- Women journalist
- Writer
Places:
- Bastar State, India (as recorded)
- Assam, India (as recorded)
- England, ENG, GB
- Central Provinces, India (as recorded)
- Bhumijan Seva Mandal, Central Provinces (as recorded)
- Ireland, 00, IE
- Greater London, ENG, GB
Variant Names
Mannin, Ethel, 1900-
Mannin, Ethel Edith
Mannin, Ethel Edith, author
Mannin, Ethel Edith, active 1924-1964, Subject of Mss Eur D950
Reynolds, Ethel Mannin.
Porteous, Ethel Edith Mannin, 1900-1984
Mannin, Ethel Edith, 1900-1984
مانين, إيثيل, 1900-1984