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See also: 1910 in literature, other events of 1911, 1912 in literature, list of years in literature. Table of contents 1 Events 2 New Books 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 Awards Events Encyclopędia Britannica published. George A. Moore publishes the first of his 3-volume Hail and Farewell[?] (last in 1914). Zuleika Dobson[?] by Max Beerbohm is published. In 2001, the book would be named as one of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century by the editorial board of the American Modern Library. Gallimard publishing house founded in Paris, France by Gaston Gallimard[?] New Books The Bracknels[?] - Forrest Reid[?] The Card[?] - Arnold Bennett The Case of Richard Meynell[?] - Mary Augusta Ward The Downfall of the Gods[?] - Hugh Clifford[?] Ethan Frome[?] - Edith Wharton The Innocence of Father Brown[?] - G. K. Chesterton The Lair of the White Worm[?] - Bram Stoker Ladies Whose Bright Eyes[?] - Ford Madox Ford Life Everlasting[?] - Marie Corelli Padre Ignacio[?] - Owen Wister[?] River Rovers[?] (poetry) - Edwin James Brady[?] The Secret Garden[?] - Frances Hodgson Burnett Zuleika Dobson[?] - Max Beerbohm Births January 24 - C. L. Moore, science ficton author February 8 - Elizabeth Bishop, poet, Pulitzer Prize winner (+ 1979) March 26 - Tennessee Williams, playwright April 8 - Emil Cioran[?], Romanian-born French philosopher and essayist (+ 1995) May 20 - Annie M. G. Schmidt[?], Dutch children books writer July 21 - Marshall McLuhan - author (+ 1980) December 11 - Naguib Mahfouz, Nobel prize-winning Egyptian novelist. Deaths October 8 - Hesba Stretton[?], author October 29 - Joseph Pulitzer Awards Nobel Prize for Literature: Count Maurice (Mooris) Polidore Marie Bernhard Maeterlinck