Newman Flower

Sir Walter Newman Flower (8 July 1879 – 12 March 1964) was an English publisher and author. He transformed the fortunes of the publishing house Cassell & Co, and later became its proprietor. As an author, he published studies of the composers George Frideric Handel, Franz Schubert and (as co-author) Arthur Sullivan. He also edited the million-word journals of Arnold Bennett for publication.

Flower in 1917

Life and career

Flower was born at Fontmell Magna, Dorset, England. He was the eldest son of John Walter Flower.[1] After schooling at the Whitgift School he entered the publishing trade in London at the age of 17.[1][2]

Publishing

Flower trained under Lord Northcliffe at the Harmsworth Press, after which he joined Cassell & Co in 1906. Cassell was at that time in the doldrums, but Flower built up a stable of magazine titles that grew to dominate the British magazine market for many years.[2] In 1912 he was given charge of the book publishing branch of the company, where he brought in such authors as Arnold Bennett, G. K. Chesterton and H. G. Wells.[2]

In 1926, Cassell's magazines were sold to the Amalgamated Press, and Flower raised enough money to buy the book-publishing branch of the company, becoming proprietor and managing director in 1927. In 1938, shortly after receiving a knighthood for services to literature, he retired, but returned during World War II to look after the literary affairs of the company while his successor, his son Desmond, was on active service.[2] Flower commissioned Winston Churchill's A History of the English-Speaking Peoples, which was eventually completed and published during the 1950s. During the war years, Churchill promised Flower that Cassell would be offered anything he later wrote about the war. The Times described the result, Churchill's The Second World War, as "perhaps the greatest coup of twentieth century publishing."[2]

Writing

Herbert Sullivan (right) with his uncle Arthur

Flower was also an author. His life of George Frideric Handel was published in 1923 and reissued in a revised edition in 1959. The book was well received, but later writers on Handel have disputed Flower's portrait of Handel as "sexless and safe".[3][4][5] In 1927, Flower collaborated with Herbert Sullivan in a biography of the latter's uncle, Sir Arthur Sullivan, his Life and Letters. This too was well received at the time but also suffered later from critical disapproval for sanitising its subject by suppressing evidence of Sullivan's gambling and sexual liaisons.[6] In 1928 Flower published a study of Franz Schubert, and in 1945 and 1950 he published two volumes of memoirs.[1] His largest literary project was to prepare the journals of Arnold Bennett for publication – more than a million words in manuscript to be edited. Rupert Hart-Davis later commented on "the prudish timidity of their editor, old Newman Flower. According to Hugh Walpole, N. F. was so appalled by much of what he found in the journals that he published only brief extracts, and those the safest."[7]

Personal life

Flower was twice married, first in 1903 to Evelyne Readwin of Wells, Norfolk, with whom he had one son, and second in 1943 to Bridget Downes of Coore, County Clare, Ireland.[1] He died at his home, Tarrant Keynston House, near Blandford, Dorset, aged 84.[1]

Notes

  1. "Flower, Sir (Walter) Newman", Who Was Who, 1920–2007, A & C Black, London; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 22 Nov 2008
  2. The Times, 13 March 1964, p. 19
  3. The Times, 12 June 1923, p. 10; and 7 March 1985, p. 9
  4. Music & Letters, Vol. 29, No. 2, April 1948, pp. 177-79
  5. Thomas, Gary C. "'Was George Frideric Handel Gay?': On Closet Questions and Cultural Politics" in Brett, Philip, Elizabeth Wood, and Gary C. Thomas. Queering the Pitch: The New Gay and Lesbian Musicology. New York: Routledge, 2006.
  6. Sherr, Richard, Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 38, No. 3, Autumn, 1985, pp. 637-43
  7. Hart-Davis, Letter of 27 October 1957
gollark: Rebuild it?
gollark: Who said anything about recovery of all material?
gollark: Why not also install lasers to demolish the building?
gollark: No.
gollark: It's not.

References

  • Flower, Newman: Through My Garden Gate, Cassell, London, 1945
  • Flower, Newman: Just as it Happened, Cassell, London, 1950
  • Hart-Davis, Rupert (ed): The Lyttelton/Hart-Davis Letters Vol 2 John Murray, London, 1979 ISBN 0-7195-3673-1
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