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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1903.
Events

Cover of the Saturday Evening Post advertising The Call of the Wild, first episode
- January–December – Henry James's novel The Ambassadors is published as a serial in the monthly North American Review.
 - May 22 – Japanese philosophy student Misao Fujimura (藤村操, born 1886) carves a poem into a tree at Kegon Falls before committing suicide over unrequited love.[1]
 - June 20 – Jack London's novel The Call of the Wild begins serial publication in the Saturday Evening Post.
 - October 24 – Mark Twain sets out for Florence (Italy).[2]
 - December – The Prix Goncourt for French literature is awarded for the first time, to John Antoine Nau for his novel Force ennemie.
 - December 16 – The London County Council erects a plaque to novelist Charles Dickens (d. 1870) on his former home in Doughty Street.
 - December 19 – The first of G. K. Chesterton's short stories in the series The Club of Queer Trades, "The Tremendous Adventures of Major Brown", appears in Harper's Weekly.
 - unknown date – William Foyle and his brother Gilbert establish the London bookselling business of Foyles.[3]
 
New books
Fiction
- Pío Baroja – El Mayorazgo de Labraz (Lord of Labraz, second of La Tierra Vasca – The Basque Country trilogy, 1900–1909)
 - Ioan A. Bassarabescu – Nuvele
 - Thio Tjin Boen – Tjerita Oeij Se
 - René Boylesve – Enfant à la Balustrade
 - Samuel Butler (died 1902) – The Way of All Flesh
 - Erskine Childers – The Riddle of the Sands
 - Joseph Conrad – Typhoon and Other Stories (U. K. book publication)
 - Joseph Conrad and Ford Madox Hueffer – Romance
 - Florence Converse – Long Will
 - Grazia Deledda – Elias Portolu
 - Isabelle Eberhardt – Trimardeur (serialization begins)
 - John Fox, Jr. – The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come
 - Mary E. Wilkins Freeman – The Wind in the Rose Bush
 - George Gissing – The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft
 - Henry James – The Ambassadors
 - Jack London – The Call of the Wild
 - John Antoine Nau – Force ennemie
 - Frank Norris (died 1902) – The Pit
 - Marmaduke Pickthall – Said the Fisherman
 - Bram Stoker – The Jewel of Seven Stars
 - Jules Verne – Travel Scholarships (Bourses de voyage)
 - Mary Augusta Ward – Lady Rose's Daughter
 - Émile Zola – Vérité
 - Jerzy Żuławski – Na Srebrnym Globie (On the Silver Globe, first in the Trylogia Księżycowa – Lunar Trilogy)
 
Children and young people
- L. Frank Baum – The Enchanted Island of Yew
 - Beatrix Potter
 - Herminie Templeton – Darby O'Gill and the Good People (book publication)
 - Kate Douglas Wiggin – Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
 
Drama
- Dusé Mohamed Ali – The Jew's Revenge
 - Jacinto Benavente – La noche del sábado (Saturday Night)
 - Haralamb Lecca – Cancer la inimă
 - André de Lorde – Le Système du docteur Goudron et du professeur Plume
 - W. Somerset Maugham – A Man of Honour
 - René Morax – La Dîme
 - Ștefan Petică – Frații
 - Florencio Sánchez – M'hijo el dotor (My son, the doctor)
 - George Bernard Shaw – Man and Superman (published)
 - J. M. Synge – In the Shadow of the Glen
 - Pierre Wolff – The Secret of Polichinelle
 - Stanisław Wyspiański – Wyzwolenie (Liberation)
 
Poetry
- Giovanni Pascoli – Canti di Castelvecchio
 - Thomas Traherne (died 1674) – Poetical Works
 - W. B. Yeats – In the Seven Woods, being poems of the Irish heroic age
 
Non-fiction
- James Allen – As a Man Thinketh
 - Ada Cambridge – Thirty Years in Australia
 - E. K. Chambers – The Mediaeval Stage
 - W. E. B. Du Bois – The Souls of Black Folk
 - Helena Rutherfurd Ely – A Woman's Hardy Garden
 - Auguste Escoffier – Le Guide culinaire
 - Helen Keller – The Story of My Life (book publication)
 - G. E. Moore – Principia Ethica
 - John Morley – The Life of Gladstone[4]
 - Alois Riegl – Der moderne Denkmalkultus, sein Wesen, seine Entstehung (The Modern Cult of Monuments, Its Character and Origin)
 - W. B. Yeats – Ideas of Good and Evil (essays)
 
Births
- January 10 – E. Arnot Robertson, English novelist and broadcaster (died 1961)
 - February 11 – Alan Paton, South African novelist and activist (died 1988)
 - February 13 – Georges Simenon, Belgian crime writer (died 1989)
 - February 17 – Sadegh Hedayat, Iranian-born novelist (suicide 1951)
 - February 21
- Anaïs Nin, French-American novelist and diarist (died 1977)
 - Raymond Queneau, French poet (died 1976)
 
 - February 22 – Morley Callaghan, Canadian writer (died 1990)
 - February 24
- Vladimir Bartol, Slovene author (died 1967)
 - Irène Némirovsky, Russian-born French novelist (died 1942)
 
 - June 8 – Marguerite Yourcenar, Belgian novelist (died 1987)
 - June 18 – Raymond Radiguet, French author (died 1923)
 - June 25 – George Orwell, English novelist and journalist (died 1950)[5]
 - July 10 – John Wyndham, English science fiction writer (died 1969)[6]
 - September 5 – János Kemény, American-born Transylvanian Hungarian writer (died 1971)
 - September 9 – Edward Upward, English novelist and short story writer (died 2009)
 - September 10 – Cyril Connolly, English critic and writer (died 1974)
 - September 14 – Mart Raud, Estonian poet, playwright and writer (died 1980)
 - October 17
- G. E. Trevelyan, English novelist (died 1941)
 - Nathanael West, American novelist and screenwriter (died 1940)
 
 - October 28 – Evelyn Waugh, English novelist and critic (died 1966)
 - December 6 (November 23 OS) – Gaito Gazdanov, Russian-born novelist (died 1971)
 - December 10
- Mary Norton, English children's writer (died 1992)
 - William Plomer (Robert Pagan), South African-born novelist, poet and literary editor (died 1973)
 
 - December 13 – Todhunter Ballard, American novelist (died 1980)
 - December 29 – Sergiu Dan, Romanian novelist and journalist (died 1976)
 - Uncertain dates – Kathleen Lindsay, prolific English-born romance novelist (died 1973)
 
Deaths
- January 22 – Augustus Hare, English biographer and travel writer (born 1834)
 - February 8 – Ada Ellen Bayly, English novelist (born 1857)
 - March 4 – Joseph Henry Shorthouse, English novelist (born 1834)
 - March 6 – Gaston Paris, French literary critic and scholar (born 1839)
 - March 8 – Josefina Wettergrund, Swedish writer (born 1830)
 - March 9 – Minnie Mary Lee, American author of poems, stories, sketches and novels (born 1825)
 - March 14 – Ernest Legouvé, French dramatist (born 1807)
 - April 28 — Frances Augusta Conant, American journalist (born 1841)
 - April 29 – Paul Du Chaillu, French American travel writer (born c. 1831)
 - May 12 – Richard Henry Stoddard, American critic and poet (born 1825)
 - May 24 – Max O'Rell (Léon Paul Blouet), French journalist (born 1847)
 - June 12 – Claymoor, Romanian fashion and entertainment critic (peptic ulcer, born c. 1842)
 - July 11 – W. E. Henley, English poet (tuberculosis, born 1847)[7]
 - August 31 – William Hastie, Scottish theologian (born 1842)
 - September 1 – Charles Bernard Renouvier, French philosopher (born 1815)
 - October 4 – Otto Weininger, Austrian philosopher (suicide, born 1880)
 - November 1 – Theodor Mommsen, German classical scholar and historian (born 1817)
 - November 11 — Lavilla Esther Allen, American author (born 1834)
 - November 19 – Hugh Stowell Scott (Henry Seton Merriman), English novelist (born 1862)
 - December 10 – Constantin Dobrescu-Argeș, Romanian journalist, playwright and peasant activist (paralysis, born 1856)
 - December 28 – George Gissing, English novelist (emphysema, born 1857)
 
Awards
References
- ↑ Suicide note (in Japanese). Archived 2014-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
 - ↑ Mark Twain (20 July 2017). The Complete Works of Mark Twain. e-artnow. pp. 8501–. ISBN 978-80-268-7815-5.
 - ↑ Giōrgos Daniēl; George Thaniel (1994). Seferis and Friends: Some of George Seferis' Friends in the English-speaking World. Mercury Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-55128-008-0.
 - ↑ Parsons, Nicholas (1985). The Book of Literary Lists. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. ISBN 0-283-99171-2.
 - ↑ "BBC – History – Historic Figures: George Orwell (1903–1950)". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
 - ↑ Seed, David (9 June 2008). A Companion to Science Fiction. John Wiley & Sons. p. 387. ISBN 978-0-470-79701-3.
 - ↑ "Biographical Information". West Chester University. Archived from the original on 2013-01-01. Retrieved 2013-12-04.
 
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