1960 in literature
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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1960.
- February–October – Astounding magazine is renamed Analog.
- Spring – August Derleth launches the poetry magazine Hawk and Whippoorwill in the United States.
- March 22 – Joan Henry's play Look on Tempests is premièred at the Comedy Theatre in London's West End, as the first play dealing openly with homosexuality to be passed for performance by the Lord Chamberlain in Britain.[1][2]
- April 27 – Harold Pinter's play The Caretaker is premièred at the Arts Theatre Club in London's West End, transferring to the Duchess Theatre the following month, where it runs for 444 performances before departing from London for Broadway, Pinter's first significant commercial success.[3][4] Alan Bates and Donald Pleasence star in the original production.
- July 11 – Harper Lee's Southern Gothic Bildungsroman To Kill a Mockingbird is published in the United States. She completes no later novel before her death in 2016.
- August 12 – Green Eggs and Ham, by Dr. Seuss, is published in the United States; 40 years on it will be the fourth-best selling English-language children's hardcover book yet written.[5]
- September 5 – Welsh poet Waldo Williams is imprisoned for six weeks for non-payment of income tax (a protest against defence spending).[6]
- October 3 – The Lilly Library is opened on the campus of Indiana University Bloomington, based on the collections of Josiah K. Lilly Jr.
- October 6 and December 16 – Dalton Trumbo, one of the Hollywood Ten, receives full screenwriting credit for his work on the films Spartacus and Exodus, released in the United States on these dates.
- c. October – Vasily Grossman submits his novel Life and Fate (Жизнь и судьба) for publication, resulting in confiscation of the manuscript and all related material by the KGB in the Soviet Union.[7]
- November – Rita Rait-Kovaleva's Russian translation of The Catcher in the Rye is published in the Soviet literary magazine Inostrannaya Literatura as Над пропастью во ржи ("Over the Abyss in Rye").[8]
- November 2 – R v Penguin Books Ltd: Penguin Books is found not guilty of obscenity for publishing Lady Chatterley's Lover in the United Kingdom.[9]
- November 8 – Richard Wright delivers a polemical lecture, "The Situation of the Black Artist and Intellectual in the United States", to students and members of the American Church in Paris, a few weeks before his death in the city from heart attack aged 52.[10]
- November 10 – Lady Chatterley's Lover sells 200,000 copies in one day following its publication in the U.K. since being banned in 1928.[11]
- November 17 – Michael Foot is re-elected to the Parliament of the United Kingdom and relinquishes the editorship of Tribune.
- November 19 – American novelist Norman Mailer stabs his wife, the artist Adele Morales.[12]
- November 24 – Raymond Queneau founds Oulipo in France.
- unknown dates
- Dutch mathematician Hans Freudenthal invents the artificial language Lincos, intended for communication with extraterrestrial intelligence.[13]
- Francophone African scholar Djibril Tamsir Niane publishes the novelization Soundjata, ou l'Epopée du Manding in Paris, the first extended transcription of the 13th-century Epic of Sundiata from Mandinka oral tradition and its first translation into a Western language.[14]
New books
Fiction
- Chinua Achebe – No Longer at Ease
- Kingsley Amis – Take a Girl Like You
- Poul Anderson – The High Crusade
- Lynne Reid Banks – The L-Shaped Room
- Stan Barstow – A Kind of Loving
- John Barth – The Sot-Weed Factor
- H. E. Bates – When the Green Woods Laugh
- Charles Beaumont – Night Ride and Other Journeys
- Robert Bloch – Pleasant Dreams: Nightmares
- Anita Rowe Block – Necessary End[15]
- Algis Budrys – Rogue Moon[16]
- Anthony Burgess
- Morley Callaghan – The Many Colored Coat
- John Dickson Carr – In Spite of Thunder
- Carlo Cassola – Bébo's Girl (La ragazza di Bube)
- Henry Cecil – Alibi for a Judge
- Louis-Ferdinand Céline – North (Nord)
- Agatha Christie – The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding
- Roald Dahl – Kiss Kiss (short stories)
- L. Sprague de Camp
- L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt – Wall of Serpents
- Carmen de Icaza – The House Across the Street (La casa de enfrente)
- Philip K. Dick
- E. L. Doctorow – Welcome to Hard Times
- Lawrence Durrell – Clea (final volume of The Alexandria Quartet, begun 1957)
- Henry Farrell – What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
- Ian Fleming – For Your Eyes Only (James Bond short stories)
- Sarah Gainham – The Silent Hostage
- Richard Gordon – Doctor in Clover
- Graham Greene – A Burnt-Out Case
- Arthur Hailey – In High Places
- Donald Hamilton – Death of a Citizen
- Wilson Harris – Palace of the Peacock
- James Leo Herlihy – All Fall Down
- Hammond Innes – The Doomed Oasis
- Michael Innes – The New Sonia Wayward
- Greye La Spina – Invaders from the Dark
- Jean Lartéguy – Les Centurions
- Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird
- Clarice Lispector – Family Ties (Laços de família) (short story collection)
- David Lodge – The Picturegoers
- Ngaio Marsh – False Scent
- John Masters – The Venus of Konpara
- Richard Matheson – The Beardless Warriors
- Judith Merrill – The Tomorrow People[17]
- Gladys Mitchell – Say It with Flowers
- Walter M. Miller – A Canticle for Leibowitz[18]
- Nancy Mitford – Don't Tell Alfred
- Alberto Moravia – La noia (The Empty Canvas)
- Edna O'Brien – The Country Girls
- Flannery O'Connor – The Violent Bear It Away
- Scott O'Dell – Island of the Blue Dolphins
- Frederik Pohl – Drunkard's Walk
- Anthony Powell – Casanova's Chinese Restaurant
- James H. Schmitz – Agent of Vega
- Nevil Shute (died January 2) – Trustee from the Toolroom
- Clark Ashton Smith – The Abominations of Yondo
- Muriel Spark – The Ballad of Peckham Rye
- Alan Sillitoe – The General
- David Storey – This Sporting Life[19]
- Rex Stout
- William Styron – Set This House on Fire
- Julian Symons – The Progress of a Crime
- John Updike – Rabbit, Run
- Irving Wallace – The Chapman Report
- John Edward Williams – Butcher's Crossing
- Raymond Williams – Border Country
- John Wyndham – Trouble with Lichen
Children and young people
- Jean Adamson – Monday Book (first in the Topsy and Tim series)
- Joan Aiken – The Kingdom and The Cave[21]
- Rev. W. Awdry – The Twin Engines (fifteenth in The Railway Series)
- Hans Baumann – Ich zog mit Hannibal (I Marched with Hannibal, 1961)
- Sheila Burnford – The Incredible Journey
- P. D. Eastman – Are You My Mother?
- Alan Garner – The Weirdstone of Brisingamen
- Jean Craighead George – My Side of the Mountain
- Scott O'Dell – Island of the Blue Dolphins
- Georges Prosper Remi (as Hergé) – Tintin au Tibet (book publication)
- Dr. Seuss
- Barbara Sleigh – The Kingdom of Carbonel
Drama
- Edward Albee – The Death of Bessie Smith and The Sandbox (first performances)
- Samuel Beckett – The Old Tune (first broadcast)
- Robert Bolt – A Man for All Seasons (stage version) and The Tiger and the Horse
- Marc Camoletti – Boeing-Boeing
- Henry Cecil and William Saroyan – Settled Out of Court
- Agatha Christie – Go Back for Murder
- Noël Coward – Waiting in the Wings
- Beverley Cross – Strip the Willow
- Witold Gombrowicz – The Marriage (Ślub, first performance)
- Lillian Hellman - Toys in the Attic
- Eugène Ionesco – Rhinocéros
- Ira Levin – Critic's Choice
- Stephen Lewis and Theatre Workshop – Sparrers Can't Sing
- Bruce Mason – The End of the Golden Weather
- Tad Mosel – All the Way Home
- Harold Pinter
- The Caretaker (first performed and published)
- The Room (first professional performance)
- A Night Out (first broadcast)
- Terence Rattigan – Ross
- Nelson Rodrigues – Beijo no Asfalto (The Asphalt Kiss)
- Wole Soyinka – A Dance of the Forests
- Gore Vidal – The Best Man
- Maruxa Vilalta – Los disorientados (The Disoriented Ones)
- Orson Welles (adaptation) – Chimes at Midnight[22]
- Tennessee Williams – Period of Adjustment
Poetry
- Douglas Livingstone – The Skull in the Mud
- Sylvia Plath – The Colossus and Other Poems
- Alan Sillitoe – The Rats and other poems
Non-fiction
- Joy Adamson – Born Free[23]
- Kingsley Amis – New Maps of Hell
- Philippe Ariès – Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life (L'Enfant et la vie familiale sous l'Ancien Régime)
- Peg Bracken – The I Hate to Cook Book
- Albert Camus (died January 4) – Resistance, Rebellion, and Death (selected essays)
- Jean-Paul Desbiens – Les Insolences du Frère Untel (The Insolences of Brother Anonymous)
- Hans-Georg Gadamer – Truth and Method (Wahrheit und Methode)
- John Howard Griffin – Black Like Me
- Helen Keller – Light in my Darkness
- Arthur Koestler – The Lotus and the Robot
- Jessica Mitford – Hons and Rebels
- A. S. Neill – Summerhill: A Radical Approach to Child Rearing
- Louis Pauwels and Jacques Bergier – The Morning of the Magicians (Le Matin des magiciens)
- R. C. Majumdar – An Advanced History of India
- Jean-Paul Sartre – Critique of Dialectical Reason (Critique de la raison dialectique)
- William L. Shirer – The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
- H. H. Smythe and M. M. Smythe – The New Nigerian Elite
- W. T. Stace – The Teachings of the Mystics
- Elie Wiesel – Night (La Nuit, 1958)
Births
- January 18 – Mark Rylance, English actor and theatre director[24]
- January 23 – André Verbart, Dutch poet
- January 28 – Robert von Dassanowsky, Austrian-American historian and academic
- January 31 – Grant Morrison, Scottish comic-book and graphic-novel scriptwriter
- February 19 – Helen Fielding, English novelist and screenwriter
- March 8 – Jeffrey Eugenides, American fiction writer
- April 28 – Ian Rankin, Scottish crime novelist
- April 29 – Andrew Miller, English novelist
- May 4 – Kate Saunders, English author and children's writer
- May 21 – John O'Brien, American novelist (died 1994)
- May 24 – Eric Brown, British science fiction writer (died 2023)
- June 2 – Julie Myerson, English novelist and columnist
- July 13 – Ian Hislop, Welsh-born satirist
- August 4 – Tim Winton, Australian novelist
- October 2 – Joe Sacco, Maltese-born graphic author
- October 18 – Hồ Anh Thái, Vietnamese author
- November 10 – Neil Gaiman, English author
- December 10 – Kenneth Branagh, Northern Irish actor and screenwriter
- December 14 – Wolf Haas, Austrian writer
- unknown dates
- Malcolm Pryce, Anglo-Welsh detective novelist
- Alexis Stamatis, Greek novelist, playwright and poet[25]
- D. J. Taylor, English literary critic and biographer