The first Cheltenham Literature Festival is held in England, so making it the longest-running event of its kind in the world.[3]
Street & Smith ceases to publish its pulp magazines in the United States.
October 5 – American writer Helene Hanff writes her first letter from New York City to the London antiquarian book dealers Marks & Co, a correspondence eventually collected as 84, Charing Cross Road.
Enid Blyton's children's books – Little Noddy Goes to Toyland, the first to introduce the title character, and The Secret Seven, first in the eponymous series – are published in the UK.[7]
New books
Fiction
Ilse Aichinger – "Spiegelgeschichte" (Mirror Story, serialized short story)
Marc Bloch – Apologie pour l'histoire, ou, Métier d'historien (translated as The Historian's Craft, 1953)
Fernand Braudel – La Méditerranée et le monde Méditerranéen à l'époque de Philippe II (The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II)
^Sutherland, John; Fender, Stephen (2010). "14 April". Love, Sex, Death & Words: surprising tales from a year in literature (2011 ed.). London: Icon Books. ISBN 978-184831-247-0.
^Hibbert, Christopher, ed. (1988). The Encyclopædia of Oxford. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-39917-X.
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