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Derek Stanford FRSL (11 October 1918 – 19 December 2008) was a British writer, known as a biographer, essayist and poet.

Educated at Upper Latymer School, Hammersmith, London, he was a conscientious objector during World War II, serving in the Non-Combatant Corps.[1] He edited Resistance, a poetry magazine of just one issue, with David West in 1946.

For a period in the early 1950s he worked with Muriel Spark on several books, and was a supporter of hers (together with the poetic eccentric Hugo Manning, a long-term friend), in the Poetry Society.[2] Stanford described Spark's ousting in Inside the Forties.

Spark convinced him of the talent of Dylan Thomas,[3] and Stanford wrote an early book on Thomas shortly after his death. He is associated with the character Hector Bartlett in Muriel Spark's A Far Cry from Kensington (1988).[4]

Stanford died in 2008, aged 90, in Brighton. His widow is the poet Julie Whitby.[citation needed]


Works



Notes


  1. Poetry & WW2 : lives of the poets Archived 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Ivan Savidge, Hugo Manning: Poet and Humanist (1997), pp.51-3.
  3. Andrew Lycett, Dylan Thomas: A New Life (2003), p. 303.
  4. "A Far Cry from Kensington".





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