Alfred Edgar Coppard
 born
Jan. 4, 1878, Folkestone.
died Jan. 13, 1957, London
Writer who achieved fame with his short stories depicting the English
rural scene and its characters. Born in humble circumstances, his father
being a journeyman tailor and his mother a hostler's daughter, Coppard
left school at the age of nine and worked first as an errand boy in Whitechapel,
London, and later as a clerk in Brighton and Oxford.
His love for literature, painting, and music led him to abandon
his office career; he settled in a cottage in the country, and his first
book of short stories, Adam and Eve and Pinch Me, was published when he
was 43. His talent was recognized and other collections of stories followed,
including Fishmonger's Fiddle (1925), which contained what is perhaps
his best story, "The Higgler." The charm of his stories lay in his poetic
feeling for the countryside and in his amusing and dramatic presentation
of rustic characters.
Several volumes of Coppard's poems were also published, and the
first volume of his autobiography, up to the early 1920s, It's Me, O Lord,
appeared after his death.
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