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  1. E.M. Forster and King's. Edward Morgan Forster (1879-1970, KC 1897-1901 and 1945-1970) came up to King's in 1897 and read Classics, getting his BA in 1900. He spent a fourth year at King’s reading History. An inheritance from his great-aunt Marianne Thornton and the success of his novels made his adult life comfortably well off, but when in ...

  2. Edward Morgan Forster (January 1, 1879 – June 7, 1970) was an English novelist, short story writer, and essayist. He is most famous for his novels. Forster is also known for a creed of life which can be summed up in the epigraph to his 1910 novel Howards End, "Only connect." Forster's two most noted works, A Passage to India and Howards End ...

  3. E. M. Forster Biography. Edward Morgan Forster was born in London in 1879, the son of an architect. He attended Tonbridge School, which he hated; he caricatured what he termed "public school behavior" in several of his novels. A different atmosphere awaited him at King's College, Cambridge, which he enjoyed thoroughly.

  4. 17 de fev. de 2012 · F or 40 years, EM Forster and the policeman Bob Buckingham were in a loving relationship. Buckingham was 28, Forster 51, when the two met. They shared holidays, friends, interests, and – on many ...

  5. 14 de mai. de 2018 · FORSTER, E. M. (1879–1970), English novelist, biographer, and critic. E. M. Forster was one of the most influential European writers of the twentieth century, and a tireless defender of humane values. Although he lived until 1970, in some ways he always remained an Edwardian liberal. Forster was born in London on New Year 's Day 1879.

  6. E.M. Forster was born on New Year’s Day 1879 in Marylebone, London to Edward Morgan Llewellyn and Alice Clara (Lily) Forster (née Whichelo). His father, an architect, died in 1880, leaving his wife and son enough to be well provided for. Later combined with a further inheritance, the two were ‘much more than merely comfortable’.

  7. 28 de set. de 2007 · E. M. Forster's career as a novelist was spectacularly lopsided. Born in 1879, he published his first four novels in quick succession (Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905), The Longest Journey (1907), A Room with a View (1908) and Howards End (1910)), had largely finished what would eventually appear as Maurice by 1914, and published his most famous and ambitious novel, A Passage to India, ten ...