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Vivian Beynon Harris

Vivian Beynon Harris
Born 1906 (1906)
Died 1987 (1988) (aged 81)
Occupation British writer

Vivian (Parkes Lucas) Beynon Harris (1906–1987) was an English writer. He was the younger brother of the well-known science fiction writer John Wyndham.

His mother was Gertrude Parkes, the daughter of successful Birmingham ironmaster John Israel Parkes. His father was George Beynon Harris, a schoolteacher from Port Eynon in South Wales, who, after passing the Incorporated Law Society final examination in 1889, practised as a solicitor in Cardiff, becoming a member of the Town Council in 1897.

After marrying Gertrude, he became a barrister, a career more suited to their social position. However, Gertrude and George separated in 1911, and Vivian and his brother lived with their mother in a small house in Birmingham until 1915, and then in a number of hotels as he and his brother attended boarding schools. He wrote of his upbringing, 'We loved our mother and each other and we were as close as it is possible for a family to be.' Later, the two boys both attended Bedales School in Hampshire. Harris and his brother remained very close for the rest of their lives.

From 1925 to 1927, Harris studied to become an actor at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, then had an engagement at the Royal Court Theatre, Sloane Square during 1927. Following this, he moved to Eastbourne due to ill health.

Some years later, while he was recovering from a nervous breakdown suffered during World War II, his brother suggested he should try writing. He wrote that he 'completed a humorous book after several months of hard work. I think this surprised him because before the war application had not been my strong point. He gave me an introduction to Curtis Brown, then his agent and within a short time it was sold outright. I promptly started another while he got back to work at the Penn Club on a thriller in which people were splattered on water & burst on pavements like poached eggs. Nobody seemed too keen on this and while it was going round the publishers I wrote another book sold it & signed a contract for three more. It wasn't that my books were any good as anything but time-wasters and laugh providers but it upset him to find a mere amateur was getting away with it while a professional couldn't.' Harris had four novels published between 1948 and 1951, all of which "employ a light, comedy-of-manners style".


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