Robert Cortes Holliday

Robert Cortes Holliday (July 18, 1880 January 1, 1947) was an American writer and literary editor.[1]

Book cover for The Business of Writing by Holliday and Renesselaer

Biography

He was born on July 18, 1880 in Indianapolis, Indiana and moved to New York to study at the Art Students' League and worked briefly as an illustrator for periodicals.[1]

He then sold books, worked as a librarian, and became a literary editor at the New York Tribune, Doubleday, Page & Co., and George H. Doran & Co. before taking an editorial position with The Bookman, serving as its chief editor from 1919 to 1920. After he left The Bookman in 1923, Holliday continued his criticism, worked for brief stints in advertising, and in 1926 became an instructor on writing for publication. Holliday also published fifteen books, including The Walking-Stick Papers (1918), Men and Books and Cities (1920), Literary Lanes and Other Byways (1925), as well as volumes on Booth Tarkington and poet Joyce Kilmer (for whom he served as literary executor).

He died on January 1, 1947 in Manhattan, New York City of heart disease.[1]

Legacy

Writer and friend, Christopher Morley, wrote of Holliday: "[he] has the genuine gift of the personal essay, mellow, fluent, and pleasantly eccentric."[2]

Bibliography

  • Walking-Stick Papers (1918)
  • Booth Tarkington (1918)
  • Peeps at People (1919)
  • Broome Street Straws (1919)
  • Men and Books and Cities (1920)
  • Turns about Town (1921)
  • Literary Lanes and Other Byways (1925)
gollark: I ensure that I'm not tied to any particular company by using commodity hardware and randomly changing OS and such unnecessarily.
gollark: Greetings, mortal.
gollark: ARM laptops have been a thing for a while. They just weren't very popular, or good.
gollark: If nothing else, they have excellent CPU designers.
gollark: And it *is* ubiquitous in high-power platforms; Intel just messed up entry into mobile. I don't know exactly why. Possibly the lack of ability to include x86 cores in custom designs.

References

  1. "R. C. Holliday, Wrote Memoir Of Kilmer". New York Times. January 2, 1947. Retrieved 2015-02-02.
  2. "Robert Cortes Holliday: The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door". norman.hrc.utexas.edu.
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