Cambridge Encyclopedia :: Cambridge Encyclopedia Vol. 79
 

William Cooper

Novelist, born in Crewe, Cheshire, C England, UK. He studied at Cambridge. In the 1930s he published four novels under his own name, but it was Scenes from Provincial Life (1950) that established his reputation and was an influence on the ‘Angry Young Men’ of the 1950s. Three further novels charting the adventures of the same anti-hero followed: Scenes from Married Life (1961), Scenes from Metropolitan Life (1982), and Scenes from Later Life (1983). In 1960 he published Genji, a play based on Lady Murasaki's 11th-c novel, The Tales of Genji. A volume of memoirs, From Early Life, appeared in 1990.

Portions of the summary below have been contributed by Wikipedia.

There are several people called William Cooper:

Judge William Cooper (1754-1809), the father of James Fenimore Cooper and founder of Cooperstown, New York. William Cooper (1761-1840), the Upper Canadian businessman. William Cooper (1786-1867), the land agent and politician in Prince Edward Island. William Cooper (1798-1864), the nineteenth century U.S. conchologist. William Cooper (1849-1939), the Australian cricketer. William Cooper (1861-?), founder of the Australian Aborigines League William Cooper (1910-2002), the twentieth century British novelist. Milton William Cooper (1943 - 2001), American writer, shortwave broadcaster, militia supporter and conspiracy theorist. William Heaton Cooper (1903 - 1995), British landscape artist.
William Cowper - Life of Cowper [next] [back] William Cookworthy

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