After completing the manuscript of
The Mint, Lawrence told Forster [letter, 6 August 1928] that he felt “as dry as a squeezed orange”; he thought it unlikely he would “ever be moved to write anything again.” Further things were to follow, however – among them a number of literary articles. In 1927, the editors of the
Spectatorinvited Lawrence to undertake some reviewing, the results of which were posthumously collected as
Men in Print(Golden Cockerel Press, 1940). He wrote under the pseudonym Colin Dale (that being, he said, the last London underground station he had entered: it is near RAF Hendon). For the
Spectatorhe wrote a review of recent or recently re-printed fiction, including works by W. H. Hudson and William Gerhardie; criticism by Philip Guadella; Hakluyt’s
405 words
Citation: Joyce, Chris. "Men in Print". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 22 September 2008 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=24840, accessed 24 November 2024.]