Collected Poems
Henry Treece
Alfred A. Knopf (1946)
In Collection
#2429
0*
Poet
Hardcover 
eng
Product Details
LoC Classification PR6039.R38 1946
Dewey 821.91
Nationality British
Dust Jacket dj
Height x Width 8.7  inch
First Edition Yes
Personal Details
Read It Yes
User Defined
Conflict WW2
Notes
Reilly 332. Book not in Reilly.

Henry Treece (December 22, 1911 – June 10, 1966 had an impressive career as teacher, historian, actor, editor and author. His published work included critical essays, poems and a fictional cycle of prehistoric Britain. An English poet and historical novelist whose ability to bring the ancient world to life in fiction makes his work especially appealing to young readers. As a poet he - together with J.F. Hendry - was a founder of the New Apocalypse movement, a reaction against the politically oriented, machine-age literature and realist poetry of the 1930s. Treece was educated at Birmingham University. He became a schoolteacher, and later he served as intelligence officer in the Bomber Command during World War II. helped John Pudney edit Air Force Poetry.

Other poetry anthologies he was involved with include The New Apocalypse (1939) with J. F. Hendry giving its name to a movement; two further anthologies with Hendry followed. He wrote a critical study of Dylan Thomas, called Dylan Thomas - Dog among the fairies published by Lindsay Drummond, London in 1949. He and Thomas fell out when Thomas refused to sign up as a New Apocalyptic.