Graham Greene bibliography
Graham Greene (1904–1991) was an English novelist regarded by many as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.[1][2] Combining literary acclaim with widespread popularity, Greene acquired a reputation early in his lifetime as a major writer, both of serious Catholic novels, and of thrillers (or "entertainments" as he termed them). He was shortlisted, in 1966 and 1967, for the Nobel Prize for Literature.[3][4] He produced over 25 novels, as well as several plays, autobiographies, and short stories.
Verse
    
- Babbling April (1925)
 - A Quick Look Behind: Footnotes to an Autobiography (1983)
 
Novels
    
- The Man Within (1929)
 - The Name of Action (1930) (repudiated by author, never re-published)
 - Rumour at Nightfall (1931) (repudiated by author, never re-published)
 - Stamboul Train (1932) (also published as Orient Express)
 - It's a Battlefield (1934)
 - England Made Me (1935) (also published as The Shipwrecked)
 - A Gun for Sale (1936) (also published as This Gun for Hire)
 - Brighton Rock (1938)
 - The Confidential Agent (1939)
 - The Power and the Glory (1940) (also published as The Labyrinthine Ways)
 - The Ministry of Fear (1943)
 - The Heart of the Matter (1948)
 - The Third Man (1949) (novella, as a basis for the screenplay)
 - The End of the Affair (1951)
 - The Quiet American (1955)
 - Loser Takes All (1955)
 - Our Man in Havana (1958)
 - A Burnt-Out Case (1960)
 - The Comedians (1966)
 - Travels with My Aunt (1969)
 - The Honorary Consul (1973)
 - The Human Factor (1978)
 - Doctor Fischer of Geneva or The Bomb Party (1980)
 - Monsignor Quixote (1982)
 - The Tenth Man (1985)
 - The Captain and the Enemy (1988)
 
Autobiography
    
- A Sort of Life (1971)
 - Ways of Escape (1980)
 - Getting To Know The General: The Story of an Involvement (1984)
 - A World of My Own: A Dream Diary (1992)
 
Travel books
    
- Journey Without Maps (1936)
 - The Lawless Roads (1939) (also published as Another Mexico)
 - In Search of a Character: Two African Journals (1961)
 - A Weed Among the Flowers (1990)
 
Plays
    
- The Great Jowett (1939) [radio play]
 - The Living Room (1953)
 - The Potting Shed (1957)
 - The Complaisant Lover (1959)
 - Carving a Statue (1964)
 - The Return of A.J. Raffles (1975)
 - Yes and No (1980)
 - For Whom the Bell Chimes (1980)
 
Screenplays
    
- The Future's in the Air (1937)
 - The Green Cockatoo (1937)
 - The New Britain (1940)
 - 21 Days (1940) (based on the novel The First and The Last by John Galsworthy)
 - Brighton Rock (1947)
 - The Fallen Idol (1948)
 - The Third Man (1949)
 - Loser Takes All (1956)
 - Saint Joan (1957) (based on the play by George Bernard Shaw)
 - Our Man in Havana (1959)
 - The Comedians (1967)
 
Short stories
    
- The Bear Fell Free (1935)[5]
 - Twenty-One Stories (1954) (originally The Basement Room [1935] with 8 stories; then Nineteen Stories [1947] adding 11 new stories; then Twenty-One Stories [1954] adding 4 new stories and removing 2 previous)
 
- "The End of the Party" (1929)
 - "The Second Death" (1929)
 - "Proof Positive" (1930)
 - "I Spy" (1930)
 - "A Day Saved" (1934)
 - "Jubilee" (1936)
 - "Brother" (1936)
 - "A Chance For Mr Lever" (1936)
 - "The Basement Room" (1936) (adapted by the author as The Fallen Idol, a film directed by Carol Reed)
 - "The Innocent" (1937)
 - "A Drive in the Country" (1937)
 - "Across the Bridge" (1938)
 - "A Little Place Off the Edgware Road" (1939)
 - "The Case for the Defence" (1939)
 - "Alas, Poor Maling" (1940)
 - "Men at Work" (1940)
 - "When Greek Meets Greek" (1941) (elsewhere retitled "Her Uncle Versus His Father")
 - "The Hint of an Explanation" (1948)
 - "The Blue Film" (1954)
 - "Special Duties" (1954) (elsewhere retitled "A Peculiar Affair of Westbourne Grove")
 - "The Destructors" (1954)
 
- A Visit to Morin (1960)
 - A Sense of Reality (1963)
 
- "Under the Garden"
 - "A Visit to Morin" (previously published in a limited edition)
 - "Dream of a Strange Land"
 - "A Discovery in the Woods"
 
- May We Borrow Your Husband? (1967)
 
- "May We Borrow Your Husband?"
 - "Beauty"
 - "Chagrin in Three Parts"
 - "The Over-night Bag"
 - "Mortmain"
 - "Cheap in August"
 - "A Shocking Accident"
 - "The Invisible Japanese Gentlemen"
 - "Awful When You Think of It"
 - "Doctor Crombie"
 - "The Root of All Evil"
 - "Two Gentle People"
 
- How Father Quixote Became a Monsignor (1980) (later becoming the first chapter of the novel Monsignor Quixote [1982])
 - The New House (1988)
 - The Last Word and Other Stories (1990)
 
- "The Last Word"
 - "The News in English"
 - "The Moment of Truth"
 - "The Man Who Stole the Eiffel Tower"
 - "The Lieutenant Died Last"
 - "A Branch of the Service"
 - "An Old Man's Memory"
 - "The Lottery Ticket"
 - "The New House" (previously published in a limited edition)
 - "Work Not in Progress"
 - "Murder for the Wrong Reason"
 - "An Appointment With the General"
 
- Collected Stories (1973) (including May We Borrow Your Husband?, A Sense of Reality, and Twenty-One Stories)
 - The Complete Short Stories (2005) (adding The Last Word, and adding or reinstating 4 stories, to Collected Stories)
 
- "The Blessing" (1966)
 - "Church Militant" (1956)
 - "Dear Dr Falkenheim" (1963)
 - "The Other Side of the Border" (1936 unfinished novel[6] originally published in Nineteen Stories [1947])
 
- No Man's Land (2005) (a film story, posthumously published with an incomplete film story, The Stranger's Hand)
 
Children's books
    
- The Little Train (1946, illus. Dorothy Craigie; 1973, illus. Edward Ardizzone)
 - The Little Fire Engine (1950, illus. Dorothy Craigie; 1973, illus. Edward Ardizzone)
 - The Little Horse Bus (1952, illus. Dorothy Craigie; 1974, illus. Edward Ardizzone)
 - The Little Steamroller (1953, illus. Dorothy Craigie; 1974, illus. Edward Ardizzone)
 
Other non-fiction
    
- The Old School: Essays by Divers Hands (ed. Greene, 1934)[7]
 - British Dramatists (1942)
 - Why Do I Write? An Exchange of Views between Elizabeth Bowen, Graham Greene and V.S. Pritchett (1948)[8]
 - The Lost Childhood and Other Essays (1951)
 - The Spy's Bedside Book (ed. with Hugh Greene, 1957)
 - Collected Essays (1969)
 - Lord Rochester's Monkey: Being the Life of John Wilmot, Second Earl of Rochester (1974)
 - An Impossible Woman: The Memories of Dottoressa Moor of Capri (ed. Greene, 1975)
 - The Pleasure-Dome: The Collected Film Criticism, 1935–40 (ed. John Russell Taylor, 1980)
 - J'Accuse: The Dark Side of Nice (1982)
 - Reflections on Travels With My Aunt (1989)
 - Yours, etc.: Letters to the Press (1989)
 - Why the Epigraph? (1989)
 - Reflections (1991)
 - The Graham Greene Film Reader: Reviews, Essays, Interviews and Film Stories (ed. David Parkinson, 1993) (also published as Mornings in the Dark: The Graham Greene Film Reader)
 - Articles of Faith: The Collected Tablet Journalism of Graham Greene (ed. Ian Thomson, 2006)
 - Graham Greene: A Life in Letters (ed. Richard Greene, 2007)
 
References
    
- Brian Diemert (1996). Graham Greene's Thrillers and the 1930s. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780773566170.
 - Brian Diemert (1996). Graham Greene's Thrillers and the 1930s. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 183. ISBN 9780773566170.
 - Candidates for the 1966 Nobel Prize in Literature
 - Robert C. Steensma (1997). Encyclopedia of the Essay. Taylor & Francis. p. 264. ISBN 9781884964305.
 - Cover of The Bear Fell Free
 - Greene, Graham (2005). Complete Short Stories. Penguin. pp. 566.
 - The Old School: Essays by Divers Hands title details at books.google.com
 - Greene's two letters from this little book are included in Graham Greene: A Life in Letters (2007).
 
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