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  2. Julian Hawthorne (June 22, 1846 – July 14, 1934) was an American writer and journalist, the son of novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne and Sophia Peabody. He wrote numerous poems, novels, short stories, mysteries and detective fiction, essays, travel books, biographies, and histories.

  3. Julian Hawthorne was the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne. He wrote poetry, novels, non-fiction, a series of crime novels based on the memoirs of New York's Inspector Byrnes, and edited several collections of short stories.

    • (3.3K)
    • July 21, 1934
    • June 22, 1846
  4. Nov 7, 2016 · During a career lasting six decades, Julian Hawthorne (the only son of Nathaniel Hawthorne) published nineteen novels, 150 novellas and stories, and over 3,000 other works: essays, journalism, reviews, poems, historical works, travelogues, biography, children’s books, and more.

  5. Jul 28, 2023 · Julian Hawthorne helped position his father in the pantheon of American literary geniuses but never entered it himself. In 1913—the year his ghost-story-writing daughter Hildegarde marched in a suffrage parade—he was convicted of mail fraud.

  6. (1846-1934) US author, journalist and anthologist, the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, of whom he wrote a biography, and father of writer Hildegarde Hawthorne (1871-1952). Julian forever lived in the shadow of his father and never mustered even a fraction of Nathaniel's reputation; indeed he sullied the family name when he became inadvertently ...

  7. Author, journalist, and editor Julian Hawthorne was the only son of the eminent U.S. writer Nathaniel Hawthorne and Sophia Peabody Hawthorne. Although Julian Hawthorne wrote prolifically and successfully, he suffered perpetually from unfavorable comparison with his father, and his fiction was never well received by critics.

  8. Within two years, four officers of the company were indicted for mail fraud, and in October 1913 Julian Hawthorne, the only son of the famous novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, was found guilty of taking part in a conspiracy to sell millions of shares in Canadian silver mines that didn’t even exist.

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