John Burland Harris-Burland
{{Short description|UK author (1870–1926)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
John Burland Harris-Burland (1870-1926) was a British writer, known for his early fantasy stories.
He was born on 1 November 1870 at Aldershot,{{Cite web|url=http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?29442|title=Summary Bibliography: Harris Burland|website=www.isfdb.org}} Hampshire, son of Major General William Burland Harris-Burland (1835-1890), decorated for his part in the Crimean War,{{Cite web|url=https://newspapers.library.wales/view/3718092/3718099/86/|title=DEATH OF A DISTINGUISHED WELSHMAN.|1890-08-02|South Wales Daily News - Welsh Newspapers|website=newspapers.library.wales}} and Eleanor Harding Bennitt (1841-1897). His siblings were William Malcom Harris-Burland (1873-1956), an electrical and mechanical engineer, and Ione Mary Harris-Burland (1879-1959) who married the journalist and author Francis (Frank) William Henry Giolma (1878-1968) and lived at James Bay, Victoria, British Columbia.{{Cite web|url=https://www.victoriaheritagefoundation.ca/HReg/JamesB/Olympia35.html|title=Heritage Register, James Bay, 35 Olympia Avenue}}
He attended F. Brackenbury's Prep School,{{Cite web|url=https://oldshirburnian.org.uk/school-archives/|title=Sherborne School Admission Register, Sherborne School Archives}} and from 1884 to 1888 he was a pupil at Sherborne School where he held two scholarships, was secretary of the Debating Society, and won the Fifth Form Competition Prize for Latin Elegiacs (1886) and the Plumptre Prize for Mathematics (1886 & 1888).{{Cite web|url=https://oldshirburnian.org.uk/school-archives/|title=Sherborne School Archives}}
Due to his health (as a child he contracted rheumatic fever and whooping cough) he was unable to enter a military career like his father, and studied for two years at theological college with the intention of joining the Church. Despite winning a theological scholarship at Durham University he decided to go to Exeter College,{{Cite book|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198117605.001.0001/acref-9780198117605-e-160|title=The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction|first1=Sandra|last1=Kemp|first2=Charlotte|last2=Mitchell|first3=David|last3=Trotter|editor-first1=Sandra|editor-last1=Kemp|editor-first2=Charlotte|editor-last2=Mitchell|editor-first3=David|editor-last3=Trotter|date=January 1, 2005|publisher=Oxford University Press|via=www.oxfordreference.com|doi=10.1093/acref/9780198117605.001.0001/acref-9780198117605-e-160}} where he matriculated on 18 October 1892.
In 1893 he won the Newdigate Prize for English Verse at Oxford University with his poem "Amy Robsart",{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.179964|title=Who S Who In Literature 1926 Edition|date=September 13, 1926|via=Internet Archive}} about the first wife of Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester. While at Oxford he edited the "Isis" magazine and in 1894 was Honorary Secretary of the Oxford Union.
After leaving Oxford he went on the stage for a year before becoming a secretary of public companies, later using the financial knowledge he acquired in his novel "The Financier."{{Cite web|url=https://oldshirburnian.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/1926-November.pdf|title=The Shirburnian, November 1926, pp.304-305}}
In 1902 his first novel "Dacobra" appeared serially in England, America, and Australia,{{Cite web|url=https://oldshirburnian.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/1926-November.pdf|title=The Shirburnian, November 1926, pp.304-305}} and was published in 1903 by R.A. Everett & Co. Its success led to him becoming a writer.
In 1906 he was married at Clacton-on-Sea to Florence Caroline Gough, daughter of the late Albert Marley. They lived at The Lyons Close, Pevensey, Sussex, and at Holly Tree Cottage, Stanton, Broadway, Worcestershire.
He died on 22 July 1926 at The Lyons Close, Pevensey, Sussex, aged 55. His wife Florence died on 27 January 1951.
Bibliography
- Dacobra, or the White Priests of Ahriman (1903)
- Princess Thora (1904),{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/princessthora00burgoog|title=The Princess Thora|first=J. B. (John Burland)|last=Harris-Burland|date=September 13, 1978|publisher=New York : Arno Press|via=Internet Archive}} re-released in 1905 in Britain as Dr. Silex{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/doctorsilex00harr|title=Dr. Silex|first=J. B. (John Burland)|last=Harris-Burland|date=September 13, 1905|publisher=London, Ward, Lock & Co.|via=Internet Archive}}
- The Black Motor-Car (1906)
- The Broken Law (1906)
- The Financier (1906)
- The Gold Worshippers (1907)
- Love, the Criminal (1907)
- Workers in Darkness (1908)
- The House of the Soul (1909)
- The Disc (1909)
- The Secret of Enoch Seal (1910)
- The Torhaven Mystery (1910)
- Sunk Island (1910)
- The Shadow of Malreward (1911)
- Lord of Irongrey (1912)
- Life's Golden Web (1912)
- The Grey Cat (1913)
- The Curse of Cloud (1914)
- Baldragon (1914)
- The White Rook (1917)
- Gabrielle Janhry (1919)
- The Golden Sword (1919)
- Greed of Conquest (1919)
- The Spy (1919)
- The White Yawl (1919)
- The Builder (1919)
- The Avalanche (1919)
- The Lion's Claws (1919)
- The Watchman (1919)
- Temple of Lies (1919)
- The Tower of Silence (published posthumously 1927)