
Louis Bromfield (December 27, 1896 – March 18, 1956) was an American novelist, essayist, and conservationist. His most famous work is Early Autumn, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1926.1
Works
- The Green Bay Tree (1924)
- Possession (1925)
- Early Autumn (1926)
- A Good Woman (1927)
- The House of Women (1927)
- The Work of Robert Nathan (1927)
- The Strange Case of Miss Annie Spragg (1928)
- Awake and Rehearse (1929)
- Tabloid News (1930)
- Twenty-four Hours (1930)
- A Modern Hero (1932)
- The Farm (1933)
- Here Today and Gone Tomorrow (1934)
- The Man Who Had Everything (1935)
- The Rains Came (1937)
- McLeod’s Folly (1939)
- England: A Dying Oligarchy (1939)
- Night in Bombay (1940)
- Wild Is the River (1941)
- Until the Day Break (1942)
- Mrs. Parkington (1943)
- The World We Live In: Stories (1944)
- What Became of Anna Bolton (1944)
- Pleasant Valley (1945)
- Bitter Lotus (1945)
- Twenty-four Hours (1946)
- Colorado (1947)
- Kenny (1947)
- Malabar Farm (1948)
- The Wild Country (1948)
- Out of the Earth (1950)
- Mr. Smith (1951)
- The Wealth of the Soil (1952)
- Up Ferguson Way (1953)
- A New Pattern for a Tired World (1954)
- Animals and Other People (1955)
- From My Experience (1955)
See also
External Links
- The Louis Bromfield Collection at Ohio State University
- Goodreads profile
- IMDb profile
- Faded Page profile
- Official website of Malabar Farm
- Works on Internet Archive
References
1. “Louis Bromfield.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed July 25, 2020.