A. W., (fl. 1602), unidentified poet Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, (1811-1856), humorist


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A
A. W., (fl. 1602), unidentified poet
Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, (1811–1856), humorist
George Abbot, (1562–1633), writer, AV translator and cleric
Kia Abdullah, (born 1982), novelist
Lascelles Abercrombie, (1881–1938), poet and critic
Paul Ableman, (1927–2006), playwright and novelist
J. R. Ackerley, (1896–1967), autobiographer and novelist
Rodney Ackland, (1908–1991), playwright, actor and screenwriter
Peter Ackroyd, (born 1949), novelist and biographer
Eliza Acton, (1799–1859), poet and cookery writer
Harold Acton, (1904–1994), writer and scholar
Paul Adam, (born 1958), novelist
Douglas Adams, (1952–2001), novelist and scriptwriter, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Richard Adams, (born 1920), novelist, Watership Down
Sarah Flower Adams, (1805–1848), poet and hymn writer, Nearer, My God, to Thee
Donald Adamson, (born 1939), author and historian
Arthur St. John Adcock, (1864–1930), novelist and editor
Joseph Addison, (1672–1719), essayist and poet, The Spectator
Percy Addleshaw, (pen name Percy Hemingway, 1866–1916), writer and poet
Diran Adebayo, (born 1968), novelist and broadcaster
James Agate, (1877–1947), diarist and critic
John Aglionby, (died 1609/10), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Grace Aguilar, (1816–1847), novelist and writer
Robert Aickman, (1914–1981), novelist and conservationist
Joan Aiken, (1924–2004), novelist
Arthur Aikin, (1783–1854), science writer
Lucy Aikin, (1781–1864), children's writer, biographer and writer on history
John Aikin, (1747–1822), writer and physician
Alfred Ainger, (1837–1904), biographer and critic
William Harrison Ainsworth, (1805–1882), novelist, Old St Paul's
Mark Akenside, (1721–1770), poet
William Alabaster, (1567–1640), poet, playwright and cleric
James Albery, (1838–1889), playwright
Alice Albinia, (born 1976), travel writer
Mary Alcock, (c. 1742-1798), poet and essayist
Richard Aldington, (1892–1962), novelist and poet
Brian Aldiss, (born 1925), novelist
Henry Aldrich, (1647–1710), poet and theologian
Monica Ali, (born 1967), novelist, Brick Lane
Cyril Alington, (1872–1955), crime novelist and non-fiction writer
Nicholas Allan, (born c. 1955), children's writer
James Allen, (1864–1912), self-help writer and poet
Walter Allen, (1911–1995), novelist and critic
Margery Allingham, (1904–1966), novelist, the Albert Campion series
Drummond Allison, (1921–1943), poet
Kenneth Allott, (1912–1973), poet and anthologist
Kenneth Allsop, (1920–1973), author and broadcaster
John Almon, (1737–1804), journalist and anthologist
David Almond, (born 1951), novelist and children's writer
Al Alvarez, (born 1929), poet and writer
Moniza Alvi, (born 1968), poet and writer
Eric Ambler, (1909–1998), novelist and screenwriter, Passage of Arms
Elizabeth Amherst (c. 1716-1779), poet and naturalist
Kingsley Amis, (1922–1995), poet and novelist, Lucky Jim
Martin Amis, (born 1949), novelist
Thomas Amory, (c. 1691-1788), novelist and miscellanist
Valerie Anand, (pen name also Flora Buckley, born 1937), novelist
Lancelot Andrewes, (1555–1626), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Roger Andrewes, (fl. 1610s), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Miles Peter Andrews, (1742–1814), playwright and poet
Norman Angell, (1872–1967), Nobel Prize winner, political writer and economist, The Great Illusion
Jane Anger, (fl. 1589), pamphleteer
Peter Anghelides (fl. 1990s), writer, Dr. Who TV serial spinoffs
George Anson, Lord Anson (1697–1762), writer, explorer and admiral
Christopher Anstey, (1724–1805), writer and poet
Charles James Apperley, (pen name Nimrod, 1777–1843), writer on hunting and horse racing
Lisa Appignanesi, (born 1946), writer and historian
Roy Apps, (born 1951), screenwriter and children's writer
Arthur John Arberry, (1905–1969), orientalist and translator, The Koran Interpreted
John Arbuthnot, (1667–1735), satirist and polymath
Fred Archer, (1915–1999), writer and farmer
Jeffrey Archer, (born 1940), novelist and politician
Philip Ardagh, (born 1961), children's writer
John Arden, (born 1930), playwright and novelist
Edward Ardizzone, (1900–1979), children's author and illustrator
Reginald Arkell, (1882–1959), novelist, playwright and screenwriter
Michael Arlen, (original name Dikran Kouyoumdjian, 1895–1956), essayist, playwright and novelist
John Arlott, (1914–1991), cricket writer and commentator
Robert Armin, (c. 1563-1615), playwright and actor
Simon Armitage, (born 1963), poet, playwright and novelist
Martin Armstrong, (1882–1974), novelist and poet
Peter Armstrong, (born 1957), poet and psychotherapist
Richard Armstrong, (1903–1986), novelist, naval historian and children's writer, Sea Change
Elizabeth von Arnim, (pen name also Alice Cholmondeley, 1866–1941), novelist, Elizabeth and Her German Garden
Edwin Arnold, (1832–1904), poet and journalist
Edwin Lester Arnold, (1857–1935), writer and novelist, Lieutenant Gullivar Jones: His Vacation
Elizabeth Arnold, (born 1944), children's writer
Matthew Arnold, (1822–1888), poet, Dover Beach
Thomas Arnold, (1795–1842), educationalist and historian
Thomas Walker Arnold, (1864–1930), Islamist scholar
William Delafield Arnold, (1828–1859), novelist and colonial administrator, Oakfield; or, Fellowship in the East
Anthony Ascham, (c. 1614-1650), scholar and politician
Roger Ascham, (c. 1515–1568), writer and scholar
John Ash, (1724–1779), lexicographer and cleric
John Ash, (born 1948), poet and travel writer
Timothy Garton Ash, (born 1955), historian
Thomas Ashe, (1836–1889), poet
Daisy Ashford, (1881–1972), child author, The Young Visiters
Elias Ashmole, (1617–1692), antiquary and patron, the Ashmolean Museum
Francis Leslie Ashton, (1904–1994), novelist
Andrea Ashworth, (born 1969), writer and scholar
Anne Askew, (1521–1546), poet, writer and martyr
Nadeem Aslam, (born 1966), novelist
Cynthia Asquith, (1887–1960), novelist and diarist
Herbert Asquith, (1881–1947), poet and novelist
Margot Asquith, (1864–1935), memoir writer
Mary Astell, (1666–1731), poet and writer
Edwin Atherstone, (1788–1872), poet and novelist
Diana Athill, (born 1917), editor, novelist and memoir writer
Kate Atkinson, (born 1952), novelist
David Attenborough, (born 1926), writer, naturalist and broadcaster
Francis Atterbury, (1663–1732), writer and bishop
Mabel Lucie Attwell, (1879–1964), children's writer and illustrator
Penelope Aubin, (1679–1738), poet, novelist and translator
John Aubrey, (1626–1697), writer and antiquary, Brief Lives
John Audelay or Awdelay, (died c. 1426), poet and cleric
W. H. Auden, (1907–1973), poet
Jane Austen, (1775–1817), novelist, Pride and Prejudice
Katherine Austen, (1629-c. 1683), diarist and poet
Alfred Austin, (1835–1913), Poet Laureate
John Langshaw Austin, (1911–1960), philosopher and translator, Sense and Sensibilia
Sarah Austin, (1793–1867), translator
Edward Aveling, (1849–1898), writer, pamphleteer and translator
Peter Avery, (1923–2008), scholar and translator
Christopher Awdry, (born 1940), children's writer
Wilbert Awdry, (styled Rev. W. Awdry, 1911–1997), children's writer and cleric, Thomas the Tank Engine
Alan Ayckbourn, (born 1939), playwright
A. J. Ayer, (1910–1989), philosopher, Language, Truth and Logic
Michael Ayrton, (1921–1975), writer and artist
Trezza Azzopardi, (born c. 1961), novelist
[edit]
B
Charles Babbage, (1791–1871), polymath
Robert Baden-Powell, (1857–1941), writer and army officer, Scouting for Boys
Francis Bacon, (1561–1626), essayist, New Atlantis
Phanuel Bacon, (1699–1783), playwright and poet
Robert Bage, (1730–1801), novelist and radical
Walter Bagehot, (1826–1877), economist and essayist
Enid Bagnold, (1889–1981), novelist and playwright, National Velvet
Richard Bagot, (1860–1921), novelist and essayist
David Bailey, (born c. 1970s), story writer and editor
Nathan Bailey, (died 1742), philologist, An Universal Etymological English Dictionary
Paul Bailey, (born 1937), novelist and dramatist
Philip James Bailey, (1816–1902), poet
Beryl Bainbridge, (born 1932), novelist
Denys Val Baker, (1917–1984), novelist and story writer
Henry Baker, (1698–1774), naturalist and poet
Samuel Baker, (1821–1893), writer and explorer
Nigel Balchin, (1908-1970), novelist and screenwriter
John Bale, (1495–1563), playwright and bishop
J. G. Ballard, (1930–2009), novelist
Samuel Bamford, (1788–1872), writer and Lancashire dialect poet
John Codrington Bampfylde, (1764-1796/7), poet
Richard Bancroft, (1544–1610), controversialist, AV translator and archbishop
Isabella Banks, (1821–1897), novelist and poet
Lynne Reid Banks, (born 1929), novelist
Anna Laetitia Barbauld, (1743–1825), poet, essayist and children's writer
W. N. P. Barbellion, (real name Bruce Frederick Cummings, 1889–1919), diarist
Richard Barber, (born 1941), historian
Alexander Barclay, (c. 1476-1552), poet and translator
Florence L. Barclay, (1862–1921), novelist
James Barclay, (born 1965), novelist
Richard Harris Barham, (pen name Thomas Ingoldsby, 1788–1845), novelist and poet, The Ingoldsby Legends
Maurice Baring, (1874–1945), playwright, novelist and poet
Sabine Baring-Gould, (1834–1924), novelist, cleric and hymn writer, Onward, Christian Soldiers
A. L. Barker, (1918–2002), novelist
Cicely Mary Barker, (1895–1973), children's and religious writer and illustrator
Elspeth Barker, (born 1940), novelist
George Granville Barker, (1913–1991), poet and novelist
Jane Barker, (1652–1732), poet and novelist
Mary Anne Barker, (1831-1911), writer, journalist and poet
Nicola Barker, (born 1966), novelist
Pat Barker, (born 1943), novelist, the Regeneration Trilogy
Raffaella Barker, (born 1964), novelist and journalist
George Barlow, (pen name James Hinton, 1837-1913/14), poet
William Barlow, (died 1613), scholar, AV translator and bishop
Kitty Barne, (1883–1961), children's writer
Barnabe Barnes, (c. 1568 or 1569–1609), poet and playwright
Julian Barnes, (born 1946), novelist, Flaubert's Parrot
William Barnes, (1801–1886), Dorset dialect poet and philologist
Richard Barnfield, (1574–1620), poet
Leslie Barringer, (1895–1968), editor and novelist
Isaac Barrow, (1630–1677), scholar and cleric
Stan Barstow, (born 1928), novelist and radio dramatist, A Kind of Loving
Mike Bartlett, (born 1980), playwright and director
William Basse, (c. 1583-1653/4), poet
Jonathan Bate, (born 1958), biographer and editor
H. E. Bates, (1905–1974), novelist, The Darling Buds of May
Henry Walter Bates, (1825–1892), naturalist and explorer
Elizabeth Bath, (1772–1856), poet
Richard Baxter, (1615–1691), poet, hymn writer and theologian
Stephen Baxter, (born 1957), SF novelist
John Bayley, (born 1925), critic and novelist
Ada Ellen Bayly, (pen name Edna Lyall, 1857–1903), novelist
Thomas Haynes Bayly, (1797–1830), poet and playwright
Francis Beaumont, (1584–1616), playwright
John Beaumont, (1583–1627), poet
Joseph Beaumont, (1616–1699), poet and cleric
Aubrey Beardsley, (1872–1898), writer and illustrator
Laura Beatty, (born c. 1970s), biographer and novelist
William Beckford, (1760–1844), novelist and patron, Vathek
Lillian Beckwith, (real name Lillian Comber, 1916–2004), novelist and memoirist
Thomas Lovell Beddoes, (1803–1849), poet
William Bedwell, (1561–1632), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Henry Charles Beeching, (1859–1919), poet and anthologist
Patricia Beer, (1919–1999), poet and critic
Constance Beerbohm, (1811–1892), writer
Julius Beerbohm, (1854–1906), travel writer and explorer
Max Beerbohm, (1872–1956), comic writer and caricaturist, Zuleika Dobson
Mrs Beeton, (born Isabella Mary Mayson, 1836–1865), writer on cookery and housekeeping Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management
Antony Beevor, (born 1946), historian and novelist, Stalingrad
Aphra Behn, (1640–1689), novelist and playwright
Clive Bell, (1881–1964), art critic
Florence Bell, (1851–1930), playwright and editor
Gertrude Bell, (1868–1926), writer and traveller
Josephine Bell, (pen name also David Wintringham, 1897–1987), novelist
Julian Bell, (1908–1937), poet
Mary Hayley Bell, (1911–2005), novelist, playwright and actress
Thomas Bell, (1792–1880), zoologist, surgeon and writer
Hilaire Belloc, (1870–1953), writer and poet
Thomas Belt, (1832–1878), naturalist and geologist
Elizabeth Benger, (1775-1827), poet, novelist and biographer
Edward Benlowes, (1603–1676), poet
Alan Bennett, (born 1934), playwright, The Madness of George III
Anna Maria Bennett, (c. 1760-1808), novelist
Arnold Bennett, (1867–1931), novelist, The Clayhanger Family
Edwin Keppel Bennett, (pen name Francis Bennett, 1887–1958), writer, poet and scholar
A. C. Benson, (1862–1925), poet and diarist, Land of Hope and Glory
E. F. Benson, (1867–1940), novelist and story writer, the Mapp and Lucia series.
Peter Benson, (born 1956), novelist
Robert Hugh Benson, (1871-1914), novelist, religious writer and cleric
Stella Benson, (1892–1933), novelist, poet and travel writer
George Bentham, (1800–1884), botanist
Jeremy Bentham, (1748–1832), philosopher
Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875–1956), novelist, humorist and comic poet, the clerihew
Elizabeth Bentley, (1767–1839), poet
Nicolas Bentley, (1907–1978), writer and illustrator
Phyllis Bentley, (1894–1977), novelist and biographer
Richard Bentley, (1662–1742), theologian and poet
Edward Berdoe, (1836–1916), critic, novelist and physician
Elisabeth Beresford, (born 1928), children's writer, the Wombles
J. D. Beresford, (1873–1947), novelist, The Hampdenshire Wonder
James Beresford, (1764–1840), satirist, translator and cleric
John Berger, (born 1926), novelist, G.
John Berkenhout, (1726–1791), naturalist
John Bourchier Berners, (1467–1533), translator and statesman
Juliana Berners or Bernes, (born c. 1388), writer on heraldry, hawking and hunting, Boke of St Albans
Mary Berry, (1763-1852), writer, editor and correspondent
Charles Bertram (1723–1765), literary forger
Annie Besant, (1847–1933), writer and campaigner
Walter Besant, (1836–1901), novelist and historian
Charles Best, (1570–1627), poet
Alfred Bestall, (1892–1986), children's writer and illustrator, Rupert Bear
Henry Digby Beste, (1768–1836), religious writer
Matilda Betham-Edwards, (1836–1919), novelist, poet and travel writer
John Betjeman, (1906–1984), Poet Laureate
Thomas Betterton, (1635–1710), playwright and actor
Edwyn Bevan, (1870–1943), philosopher and historian
Tessa Biddington, (born 1954), poet
John Stanyan Bigg, (1828–1865), poet
Mark Billingham, (born 1961), novelist
Thomas Bilson, (1547–1616), theologian, AV translator and bishop
Andrew Bing, (1574–1652), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Laurence Binyon, (1869–1943), poet and art historian
T. J. Binyon, (1936–2004), novelist, translator and biographer
Thomas Birch, (1705–1766), historian
Caroline Bird, (born 1986), poet and playwright
Isabella Bird, (1831–1904), travel writer and naturalist
Dea Birkett, (born 1958), writer
John Birtwhistle, (born 1947), poet and librettist
Samuel Bishop, (1731–1795), poet and essayist
Robert Black, (1829–1915), fiction writer, translator and journalist
John Blackburn, (born 1923), novelist
Thomas Blackburn, (1916–1977), poet
Malorie Blackman, (born 1962), children's writer and screenwriter, the Noughts and Crosses series
R. D. Blackmore, (1825–1900), novelist, Lorna Doone
Richard Blackmore, (1654–1729), poet and religious writer
Algernon Blackwood, (1869–1951), novelist and short story writer
Caroline Blackwood, (1931–1996), novelist and critic
Helen Blackwood, Lady Dufferin, (1807–1867), poet and songwriter
Quentin Blake, (born 1932), children's writer and illustrator
William Blake, (1757–1827), poet and artist, Songs of Innocence and of Experience
Helen Blakeman, (born 1971), playwright and screenwriter
Susanna Blamire, (1747–1794), poet
Edward Blanchard, (1820–1899), playwright and songwriter
Robert Blatchford, (pen name Nunquam, 1851–1943), journalist, writer and campaigner
Nicholas Blincoe, (born 1965), novelist and screenwriter
Mathilde Blind, (1841–1896), poet and biographer
Edward Blishen, (1920–1996), writer and broadcaster
Robert Bloomfield, (1766–1823), poet
Charles Blount, (1654–1693), controversialist
Edmund Blunden, (1896–1974), poet, author and critic
Anthony Blunt, (1907–1983), art historian and spy
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, (1840–1922), poet and author
Ronald Blythe, (born 1922), writer and editor,
Enid Blyton, (1897–1968), children's author, Noddy
Frederick S. Boas, (1862–1957), literary historian
John Ernest Bode, (1816–1874), poet, hymn writer and cleric
John Bodenham, (1569–1610), anthologist
Barbara Bodichon, (1827–1891), educationalist and feminist
John Bois, (1560–1643), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Osbern Bokenam, (c. 1393–c. 1463), literary historian and cleric
Robert Bolt, (1924–1995), dramatist and screenwriter, A Man For All Seasons
Michael Bond, (born 1926), children's writer, Paddington Bear series
Elizabeth Bonhôte, (1744–1818), novelist, Bungay Castle
Barton Booth, (1681–1733), actor and poet
Charles Booth, (1840–1916), social researcher, Life and Labour of the People in London
Martin Booth, (1944–2004), novelist, poet and editor
Brooke Boothby, (1744–1824), scholar and poet
Frances Boothby, (fl. 1669-70), playwright
Basil Boothroyd, (1910–1988), writer and humorist
George Borrow, (1803–1881), novelist and travel writer, Romany Rye
Lucy M. Boston, (1892–1990), children's writer, Green Knowe series
Phyllis Bottome, (1884–1963), novelist and psychoanalyst
Gordon Bottomley, (1874–1948), poet and dramatist
Ronald Bottrall, (1906–1989), poet and academic
Marjorie Boulton, (born 1924), writer and Esperantist
Francis William Bourdillon, (1852–1921), poet
Thomas Edward Bowdich, (1791–1824), traveler and writer
Henrietta Maria Bowdler, ("Harriet", 1750–1830), religious writer, editor and expurgator
Jane Bowdler, (1743–1784), poet and essayist
John Bowdler, (1746-1823), religious writer and pamphleteer
John Bowdler, (1783-1815), writer and poet
Thomas Bowdler, (1754–1825), writer and expurgator
Thomas Bowdler, 1782-1856), religious writer and cleric
Elizabeth Bowen, (1899–1973), novelist and story writer
John Griffith Bowen, (born 1924), novelist and screenwriter, Hetty Wainthropp Investigates TV series, with David Cook
Marjorie Bowen, (real name Gabrielle Margaret Vere Long, 1885–1952), novelist and writer
Emily Bowes, (1806–1857), religious poet and artist
Mary Bowes, (1749–1800), playwright and botanist
Tim Bowler, (born c. 1967), children's writer
William Lisle Bowles, (1762–1850), poet and critic
Maurice Bowra, (1898–1971), scholar and wit
Frank Cottrell Boyce, (born 1959), children's writer and screenwriter, Millions
Abel Boyer, (c. 1667-1729), journalist, miscellanist and translator
Charles Boyle, (1674–1731), writer and playwright
Charles Boyle, (born 1951), poet
John Boyle, (1707–1762), writer and translator
Roger Boyle, (1621–1679), playwright and statesman
Alison Brackenbury, (born 1953), poet
Malcolm Bradbury, (1932–2000), novelist
Mary Elizabeth Braddon, (1837–1915), novelist, Lady Audley's Secret
Barbara Taylor Bradford, (born 1933), novelist, A Woman of Substance
Ernle Bradford, (1922–1986), historian and writer
Charles Bradlaugh, (1833–1891), writer and freethinker
A. C. Bradley, (1851–1935), literary critic
Edward Bradley, (pen name Cuthbert M. Bede, B. A., 1827–1889), novelist and cleric
F. H. Bradley, (1846–1924), philosopher
Henry Bradley, (1845–1923), philologist and lexicographer
Henry Bradshaw, (c. 1450-1513), poet and monk
Melvyn Bragg, (born 1939), novelist, biographer and broadcaster
John Braine, (1922–1986), novelist, Room at the Top
Richard Braithwaite or Brathwait, (1588–1673), poet
Ernest Bramah, (real name Ernest Bramah Smith, 1868–1942), novelist and humorist
James Bramston, (1694–1744), poet and satirist
Barbarina Brand, Lady Dacre, (1768–1854), poet, playwright and translator
Christianna Brand, (real name Mary Christianna Milne, 1907–1988), novelist
Hannah Brand, (1754–1821), playwright, poet and actress
Jo Brand, (born 1957), writer and comedian
William Branthwaite, (died 1620), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Anna Brassey, (1839-1887), travel writer
Angela Brazil, (1868–1947), novelist
Wallace Breem, (1926–1990), novelist and librarian
Elinor Brent-Dyer, (1894–1969), children's writer, the Chalet School series
John Brereton, (1571 or 1572-c. 1632), travel writer and explorer
Nicholas Breton, (c. 1545–c. 1626), poet and tractarian
Richard Brett, (1567–1637), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Simon Brett, (born 1945), novelist and playwright
E. Cobham Brewer, (1810–1897), writer and cleric, Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
John Bridges, (1536-1618), tractarian and bishop
Robert Bridges, (1844–1930), Poet Laureate
Raymond Briggs, (born 1934), children's writer and illustrator, Father Christmas
John Bright, (1811–1889), orator and politician
Joanna Briscoe, (born 1963), novelist and journalist
Vera Brittain, (1893–1970), writer and pacifist
Edwin Brock, (1927–1997), poet
William Brock, (1807-1875), biographer and Baptist minister
Alexander Brome, (1620–1666), poet
Richard Brome, (c. 1590-c. 1653), playwright, The Sparagus Garden
Vincent Brome, (1910–2004), biographer and novelist
Eliza Bromley, (fl. 1784-1803), novelist and translator
Eleanor Bron, (born 1938), writer and actress
Anne Brontë, (1820–1849), novelist, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Charlotte Brontë, (1816–1855), novelist, Jane Eyre
Emily Brontë, (1818–1848), novelist and poet, Wuthering Heights
Patrick Brontë, (born Brunty, 1777–1861), poet, writer and cleric
Frances Brooke, (1724–1789), novelist and playwright
Jocelyn Brooke, (1908–1966), novelist, poet and biographer
Rupert Brooke, (1887–1915), poet
Anita Brookner, (born 1929), novelist
Kevin Brooks, (born 1959), children's writer
Shirley Brooks, (1816–1874), novelist, playwright and poet
William Broome, (1689–1745), poet and translator
Robert Barnabas Brough, (1828–1864), writer and poet
John Brown, (1715–1766), essayist and divine
Pamela Brown, (1924–1989), children's writer and TV producer
Pete Brown, (born 1940), performance poet and songwriter
Pete Brown, (born 1968), beer writer and columnist
Stewart Brown, (born 1951), poet and scholar
Tom Brown, (1663–1704), satirist and translator
Anthony Browne, (born 1946), children's writer and illustrator
Edward Browne, (1862–1926), orientalist and writer
Isaac Hawkins Browne, (1705–1760), poet
Moses Browne, (1704–1787), poet and cleric
Thomas Browne, (1705–1782), polymath, Religio Medici
William Browne, (c. 1590-c. 1645), poet
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, (1806–1861), poet
Oscar Browning, (1837–1923), writer and scholar
Robert Browning, (1812–1889), poet
Alan Brownjohn, (born 1931), poet and novelist
Dorita Fairlie Bruce, (1885–1970), children's writer, Dimsie Goes to School
Francis Bryan, (c. 1490-1550), poet and courtier
Samuel Egerton Brydges, (1762–1836), bibliographer and editor
Anthony Buckeridge, (1912–2004), children's writer, the Jennings stories
James Silk Buckingham, (1786–1855), journalist and travel writer
Leicester Silk Buckingham, (1825–1867), playwright and writer on history
Francis Trevelyan Buckland, (1826–1880), natural historian and surgeon
William Buckland, (1784–1856), geologist, palaeontologist and cleric
Henry Thomas Buckle, (1821–1862), historian
Maria Elizabeth Budden, (c. 1780-1832), children's writer
Eustace Budgell, (1686–1737), writer and politician
Frank Thomas Bullen, (1857-1915), novelist and autobiographer
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, (1803–1873, novelist, poet and playwright, The Last of the Barons
Robert Bulwer-Lytton, (pen name Owen Meredith, 1831–1891), poet, Lucile
Basil Bunting, (1900–1985), poet, Briggflatts
John Bunyan, (1628–1688), writer, The Pilgrim's Progress
Anthony Burgess, (real name John Burgess Wilson, 1917–1993), novelist, A Clockwork Orange
Melvin Burgess, (born 1954), children's writer, Junk
John William Burgon, (1813–1888), poet and theologian
John Burgoyne, (1722–1792), playwright and army officer
Thomas Burke, (1886–1945), novelist and writer on London
Francis Burleigh, (fl. 1590-1610), AV translator and cleric
Francis Cowley Burnand, (1836–1917), humorist and dramatist
Thomas Burnet, (c. 1635-1715), theologian and cosmogonist
Frances Hodgson Burnett, (1849–1924), children's writer, The Secret Garden
Charles Burney, (1726–1814), music scholar and composer
Charles Burney, (1757–1817), scholar, schoolmaster and cleric
Fanny Burney, (also known as Frances, Mme d'Arblay, 1752–1840), novelist and diarist, Evelina
Frances Burney, (1776–1828), dramatist
James Burney, (1750–1821), travel writer and admiral
Sarah Burney, (1772–1844), novelist
Richard Burns (poet), (also writes as Richard Berengarten, born 1943), poet
James Burrow, (1701-1782), scholar, scientist and lawyer
Richard Francis Burton, (1821–1890), writer, translator and explorer, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night
Robert Burton, (1577–1640), polymath, The Anatomy of Melancholy
Charlotte Bury, (1775–1861), novelist and poet
Gwendoline Butler, (born 1922), novelist
Joseph Butler, (1692–1752), theologian and bishop
Josephine Butler, (1828–1906), writer and social campaigner
Samuel Butler, (1612–1680), poet and satirist, Hudibras
Samuel Butler, (1835–1902), writer and satirist, Erewhon
Mary Butts, (1890–1937), writer and poet
Bertha Henry Buxton, (1844-1881), novelist and children's writer
Nigel Buxton, (born 1924), travel writer and wine critic
A. S. Byatt, (born 1936), novelist, Possession: A Romance
John Byrom, (1692–1763), poet
John Byron, (1723–1786), memoirist and admiral
Lord Byron, (1777–1824), poet, Don Juan
Ingram Bywater, (1840–1914), scholar and editor
[edit]
C
Florence Caddy, (1837–1923), writer
Hall Caine, (1853–1931), romantic novelist and playwright
Mona Caird, (1854–1932), essayist, reformer and feminist
Charles Stuart Calverley, (1831–1884), poet and translator
Roland Camberton, (real name Henry Cohen, 1921–1965), novelist
Ada Cambridge, (1844–1926), novelist and poet
William Camden, (1551–1623), historian and antiquarian
Thomas Campion, (1567–1620), poet and composer
Denis Cannan, (born 1919), playwright and screenwriter, Dear Daddy
Gilbert Cannan, (1884–1955), novelist and translator
Joanna Cannan, (1898–1961), novelist and children's writer
May Wedderburn Cannan, (1893–1973), poet and autobiographer
Dorothy Cannell, (born 1943), novelist
William Canton, (1845–1926), poet and children's writer
Edward Capell, (1713–1781), Shakespearean scholar
John Capgrave, (1393–1464), history writer
Thomas Carew, (1595–1640), poet
Henry Carey, (1687–1743), poet, playwright and song-writer, Sally in Our Alley
Mary Carey, Lady Carey, (c. 1609-c. 1680), poet
Robert Carliell, (died c. 1622), poet
Edward Carpenter, (1844–1929), poet, social critic and philosopher
Humphrey Carpenter, (1946–2005), biographer and broadcaster
Barbara Comyns Carr, (1907–1992), novelist and artist
J. L. Carr, (1912–1994), novelist and school textbook writer
Lewis Carroll, (real name Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, 1832–1898), children's writer and mathematician, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Angela Carter, (1940–1992), novelist, The Magic Toyshop
Elizabeth Carter, (1717–1806), poet, translator and bluestocking
Barbara Cartland, (1901–2000), novelist
Justin Cartwright, (born 1945), novelist
William Cartwright, (1611–1643), playwright
Elizabeth Cary, (1585–1639), poet and playwright, The Tragedy of Marian, the Fair Queen of Jewry
Henry Francis Cary, (1772–1844), translator and critic
Lucius Cary, (Lord Falkland, 1610–1643), poet, writer and politician
Patrick Cary or Carey, (c. 1624-1658), poet
John Caryll, (1625–1711), poet, playwright and diplomat
Egerton Castle, (1858-1920), novelist (with his wife Agnes) and fencer
Sarah Caudwell, (real name Sarah Cockburn, 1939–2000), novelist
Charles Causley, (1917–2003), poet and editor
David Caute, (born 1936), novelist and historian
Tiberius Cavallo, (1749-1809), natural philosopher
George Cavendish, (1494-c. 1652), biographer and poet
Jane Cavendish, (later Jane Cheyne, 1621–1669), poet and playwright
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, (1623–1673), poet, novelist and playwright
William Cavendish, (1592–1676), polymath
William Caxton, (c. 1415/22-c. 1492), printer and translator
Lord David Cecil, (1902–1986), scholar and biographer
Dorothea Celesia, (born Mallet, 1738–1790), poet and translator
Susanna Centlivre, (earlier pen name Carroll, 1667–1723), playwright, poet and actress
Laurence Chaderton, (c. 1536-1640), theologian, AV translator and cleric
John Chalkhill, (fl. 1600?), poet
Thomas Chaloner, (1521–1565), poet, translator and statesman
William Chamberlayne, (1619–1689), poet
Aidan Chambers, (born 1934), children's writer, Postcards from No Man's Land
E. K. Chambers, (1866–1954), literary historian
Ephraim Chambers, (c. 1680-1740), writer and encyclopedist, Cyclopaedia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences
Meira Chand, (born 1943?), novelist
Mary Chandler, (1687–1745), poet
Raymond Chandler, (1888–1959), crime writer
Henry Channon, ("Chips", 1897-1958), writer, diarist and politician
George Chapman, (1559–1634), poet, playwright and translator
Guy Chapman, (1889–1972), writer and historian
Hester Chapone, (1727–1801), writer and bluestocking
Charlotte Charke, (born Cibber, 1713–1760), writer and actress
Elizabeth Charles, (1828–1896), novelist and religious writer
Gerda Charles, (real name Edna Lipson, 1914–1996), novelist and anthologist
Maria Louisa Charlesworth, (1819–1880), children's writer
Leslie Charteris, (born Leslie Charles Bowyer-Yin, 1907–1993), novelist, Simon Templar books
James Hadley Chase, (born Rene Brabazon Raymond, other pen names James L. Docherty, Ambrose Grant, and Raymond Marshall, (1906–1985), novelist
Debjani Chatterjee, (born 1952), poet, translator and children's writer
Georgiana Chatterton, (1806–1876), travel writer, novelist and poet
Thomas Chatterton, (pseudonym Thomas Rowley, 1752–1770), poet
Beth Chatto, (born 1923), gardening writer
Bruce Chatwin, (1940–1989), novelist and travel writer
Geoffrey Chaucer, (c. 1343–1400), poet and courtier, The Canterbury Tales
Cris Cheek, (born 1955), poet and performer
John Cheke, (1514–1557), classical scholar and translator
George Tomkyns Chesney, (1830–1895), novelist and army officer, The Battle of Dorking
G. K. Chesterton, (1874–1936), novelist, poet and essayist, Father Brown stories
Henry Chettle, (c. 1564–c. 1607), playwright
Peter Cheyney, (1896–1951), novelist, Can Ladies Kill?
Josiah Child, (1630-1699), political economist and merchant
Erskine Childers, (1870–1922), novelist and politician, The Riddle of the Sands
William Chillingworth, (1602–1644), religious controversialist
Mary Cholmondeley, (1859–1925), novelist
Agatha Christie, (1891–1976), mystery writer
Mary Chudleigh, (1656–1710), poet and polemicist
Alfred John Church, (1829–1912, scholar, poet and translator
Richard Church (poet), (1893–1972), poet
Richard William Church, (1815–1890), biographer, church historian and cleric
Caryl Churchill, (born 1938), playwright and translator, Serious Money
Charles Churchill, (1731–1764), poet and satirist
Winston Churchill, (1874–1965), British prime minister, author and Nobel prizewinner
Thomas Churchyard, (c. 1520–1604), poet and soldier
Colley Cibber, (1671–1757), Poet Laureate, playwright, and bowdlerizer
Horatio Clare, (born 1973), writer
John Clare, (1793–1864), poet
Emily Clark, (fl. 1798-1819), novelist and poet
Arthur C. Clarke, (1917–2008), novelist, 2001: A Space Odyssey
Charles Cowden Clarke, (1787–1877), writer and scholar
Lindsay Clarke, (born 1939), novelist and poet, The Chymical Wedding
Mary Cowden Clarke, (1809–1898), writer and scholar
Pauline Clarke, (born 1921), children's writer, The Twelve and the Genii
Richard Clarke (vicar), (died 1634), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Samuel Clarke, (1675–1729), philosopher and cleric
Susanna Clarke, (born 1959), novelist, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Laurence Clarkson or Claxton, (1615-1667), religious writer and theologian
John Clavell, (1601–1643), writer, playwright and highwayman
Chris Cleave, (born 1973), novelist and journalist
Brian Cleeve, (1921–2003), novelist
John Cleland, (1709–1789), novelist, Fanny Hill: or, the Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure
Jack Clemo, (1916–1994), poet and novelist
John Cleveland, (1613–1658), poet
Anne Clifford, (1590–1676), diarist
Lucy Clifford, (wrote as Mrs. W. K. Clifford, 1846–1929), novelist, playwright and children's writer
William Kingdon Clifford, (1846–1879), philosopher, mathematician and children's writer
Caroline Clive, (pen name "V", 1801–1872), novelist and poet
Kitty Clive, (born Catherine Raftor, 1711–1785), playwright and actress
Arthur Hugh Clough, (1819–1861), poet
William Cobbett, (1763–1835), writer and pamphleteer, Rural Rides
Bob Cobbing, (1920–2002), poet and visual artist
Richard Cobbold, (1797–1877), novelist and writer
Richard Cobden, (1804–1865), politician and pamphleteer
Aston Cockayne, (1605–1684), poet and playwright
Catherine Trotter Cockburn, (1679–1749), novelist and playwright
Edward Cocker, (1631–1676), writer and engraver, Arithmetick
Henry Cockton, (1807–1853), novelist
Jonathan Coe, (born 1961), novelist, What a Carve Up!
Lady Mary Coke, (1727–1811), letter writer and diarist
Barry Cole, (born 1936), poet and novelist
G. D. H. Cole, (1889–1959), economist, historian and novelist
Margaret Cole, (1893–1980), politician and novelist
Olivia Cole, (born 1982), poet
John William Colenso, (1814–1883), writer on religion and Africa, and bishop
Christabel Rose Coleridge, (1843–1921), novelist and editor
Derwent Coleridge, (1800–1883), writer, scholar and cleric
Ernest Hartley Coleridge, (1846–1920), literary historian, editor and poet
Hartley Coleridge, (1796–1849), poet and critic
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, (1861–1907), novelist and poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, (1772–1834), poet, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Sara Coleridge, (1802–1852), author and translator
Jane Collier, (1714–1755), satirist
Jeremy Collier, (1650–1726), pamphleteer and cleric
John Collier, (pen name Tim Bobbin, 1708–1786), poet and caricaturist
John Collier, (1901–1980), story writer and screenwriter
John Payne Collier, (1789–1883), literary critic, editor and forger
Mary Collier, (c. 1688-1762), poet
R. G. Collingwood, (1889–1943), philosopher and historian
W. G. Collingwood, (1854–1932), writer, artist and antiquary
An Collins, (fl. 1653), poet
Jackie Collins, (born 1937), novelist, The World Is Full of Married Men
John Collins, (1625–1683), mathematician
John Collins, (1742–1808), poet and song writer
John Churton Collins, (1848–1908), literary critic
Mortimer Collins, (1827–1876), novelist and poet
Norman Collins, (1907-1982), novelist and broadcasting executive
Wilkie Collins, (1824–1889), novelist, The Moonstone
William Collins, (1721–1759), poet
John Stewart Collis, (1900–1984), biographer and countryside writer
Maurice Collis, (1889–1973), writer and biographer
Mary Collyer, (c. 1716–1762), translator and novelist.
George Colman, (1732–1794), playwright
George Colman, (1762–1836), playwright and poet
William Combe, (1741–1823), miscellanist and poet
Alex Comfort, (1920–2000), novelist, poet and writer, The Joy of Sex
Jack Common, (1903–1968), novelist
Ivy Compton-Burnett, (1884–1969), novelist, Pastors and Masters
William Congreve, (1670–1729), playwright and poet, The Way of the World
Cyril Connolly, (1903–1974), writer and critic
Joseph Connolly, (born 1950), journalist and novelist
Tony Connor, (born 1930), poet and playwright
Robert Conquest, (born 1917), historian and poet, The Great Terror
Joseph Conrad, (1857–1924), novelist, Lord Jim
Henry Constable, (1562–1613), poet
Hugh Conway, (real name Frederick John Fargus, 1847–1885), novelist
John Conybeare, (1692–1755), theologian and bishop
John Josias Conybeare, (1779–1824), scholar, translator and cleric
William Daniel Conybeare, (1787–1857), writer, geologist and cleric
William John Conybeare, (1815–1857), religious writer, novelist and cleric
David Cook, (born 1940), novelist, screenplay writer and presenter
Eliza Cook, (1818–1889), poet
James Cook, (1728–1779), circumnavigator and travel writer
Judith Cook, (1933–2004), novelist
Dorian Cooke, (1916–2005), poet and intelligence officer
Catherine Cookson, (1906–1998), novelist
Artemis Cooper, (born 1953), writer and editor
Duff Cooper, (1890–1954), writer, diarist and politician
Jilly Cooper, (born 1937), writer and novelist
Lettice Cooper, (1897–1994), novelist and critic
Thomas Cooper, (1805–1892), poet, novelist and Chartist
William Cooper, (real name H. S. Hoff, 1910–2002), novelist
Wendy Cope, (born 1945), poet
Esther Copley, (1786–1851), children's writer and writer on domestic economy
A. E. Coppard, (1878–1957), poet and story writer
Abiezer Coppe, (1619-1672), religious pamphleteer
Richard Corbet or Corbett, (1582–1635), poet and bishop
Jim Corbett, (1875–1955), writer, hunter and conservationist, Man-Eaters of Kumaon
Julian Corbett, (1854–1922), naval historian
Marie Corelli, (1855–1924), novelist
Alan Coren, (1938-2007), writer, satirist and broadcaster
Hilary Corke, (1921–2001), poet
Frances Cornford, (1886–1960), poet
Francis M. Cornford, (1874–1943), scholar and poet
John Cornford, (1915–1936), poet
Caroline Cornwallis, (1786–1858), writer and polyglot
Bernard Cornwell, (born 1944), novelist
William Cornysh or Cornish, (1465–1523), dramatist, poet and composer
Felicitas Corrigan, (1908–2003), writer and nun
Annie Sophie Cory, (pen name Victoria Cross, 1868–1952), novelist
William Johnson Cory, (1823–1892), poet and educationalist
Thomas Coryat or Coryate, (c. 1577-1617), travel writer and poet
Randle Cotgrave, (died 1634 or 1652), lexicographer
Joseph Cottle, (1770–1853), poet, essayist and bookseller
Charles Cotton, (1630–1687), poet and writer
Robert Bruce Cotton, (1570/71-1631), antiquarian and political writer, the Cotton Library
William John Courthope, (1842–1917), literary historian and poet
Miles Coverdale, (c. 1488-1569), Bible translator
Noël Coward, (1899–1973), playwright, Blithe Spirit
Abraham Cowley, (1618–1667), poet
Hannah Cowley, (1743–1809), playwright, The Belle's Stratagem
William Cowper, (1731–1800), poet and hymn writer, John Gilpin
Noël Coward, (1899–1973), playwright, Blithe Spirit
Anthony Berkeley Cox, (pen names Anthony Berkeley, Francis Iles, A. Monmouth Platt, 1893–1971), novelist
George Crabbe, (1754–1832), poet and naturalist
Jim Crace, (born 1946), novelist
Hubert Crackanthorpe, (born Cookson, 1870–1896), essayist and story writer
Amanda Craig, (born 1959), novelist
Dinah Craik, (also wrote as Miss Mulock, 1826–1887), novelist and poet, John Halifax, Gentleman
Richard Crashaw, (1613–1649), poet
Elizabeth Craven, (1750–1828), travel writer and playwright
John Creasey, (1908–1973), novelist
Edward Shepherd Creasy, (1812–1878), historian, Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World
Thomas Creech, (1659–1700), translator
Thomas Creevey, (1768–1838), diarist and politician
Mandell Creighton, (1843–1901), historian and bishop
Helen Cresswell, (1934–2005), children's writer and screenwriter, Lizzie Dripping
Jasmine Cresswell, (born 1941), novelist
Arthur Shearly Cripps, (1869–1952), story writer and poet
Quentin Crisp, (born Denis Charles Pratt, 1908–1999), writer and raconteur
Rupert Croft-Cooke, (pen name Leo Bruce, 1903–1979), novelist
Andrew Crofts, (born 1953), ghost writer
Richmal Crompton, (real name Richmal Crompton Lamburn, 1890–1969), novelist, the William books
Kevin Crossley-Holland, (born 1941), children's writer, poet and editor
Catherine Crowe, (1790–1872), novelist and playwright
William Crowe, (1745–1829), poet
Aleister Crowley, (1875–1947), writer, mystic and occultist
John Crowne, (1641–1712), playwright
Andrew Crozier, (1943–2008), poet and scholar
Andrew Crumey, (born 1961), novelist
J. A. Cuddon, (1928–1996), novelist, playwright and dictionary compiler
Nathanael Culverwel, (1619–1651), philosopher and theologian
Richard Cumberland, (1631–1718), philosopher and bishop
Richard Cumberland, (1732–1811), playwright, poet and novelist
Nancy Cunard, (1896–1965), poet, memoir writer and translator
Joseph Cundall (pen name Stephen Percy, 1818–1895), children's writer and publisher
William Curtis, (1746–1799), botanist, The Botanical Magazine
Henry Cust, (1861–1917), author and editor
Judith Cutler, (born 1946), novelist
John Cutts, (1661–1707), poet, writer and soldier
[edit]
D
David Dabydeen, (born 1955), novelist and critic
Charlotte Dacre, (pen name Rosa Matilda, 1782–1841), novelist and poet
Roald Dahl, (1916–1990), children's writer
William Dakins, (died 1607), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Penny Dale, (born 1954), children's writer and illustrator
William Dampier, (1651–1715) travel writer and buccaneer
Clemence Dane, (real name Winifred Ashton, 1888–1965), novelist and playwright
Samuel Daniel, (1562–1619), poet and historian
Sarah Daniels, (born 1957), playwright
Alicia D'Anvers, (1688–1725), poet
Ella D'Arcy, (1856?-1939), novelist and translator
Charles Darwin, (1809–1882), naturalist, On the Origin of Species
Erasmus Darwin, (1731–1802), natural historian and poet
Florence Henrietta Darwin, (1863/4-1920), playwright
Elizabeth Daryush, (born Bridges, 1887–1977), poet
George Webbe Dasent, (1817–1896), writer and translator
Rana Dasgupta, (born 1972), novelist
William Davenant, (1606–1668), poet and playwright
Robert Davenport, (fl. 1623-1639), playwright and poet
C. A. F. Rhys Davids, (1857–1942), Buddhist scholar and translator
Lionel Davidson, (1922–2009), novelist, The Night of Wenceslas
Donald Davie, (1922–1995), poet and critic
Caitlin Davies, (born 1964), novelist and journalist
Hunter Davies, (born 1936), writer, biographer and ghost writer
Hugh Sykes Davies, (1909–1984), poet and novelist
John Davies, (c. 1565-1618), poet and satirist
John Davies, (1569–1626), poet and lawyer
Linda Davies, (born 1963), novelist
Peter Ho Davies, (born 1966), novelist
John Davis or Davys, (c. 1543-1605), writer and navigator
Lindsey Davis, (born 1949), novelist
Ann Davison, (1914–1992), travel writer
Humphry Davy, (1778–1829), writer, chemist and inventor
Richard Dawkins, (born 1941), ethologist and science writer, The God Delusion
Coningsby Dawson, (1883–1959), novelist, poet and soldier
Jennifer Dawson, (1929–2000), novelist
William James Dawson, (1854–1928), poet and religious writer
Jeffery Day, (1896–1918), poet
John Day, (1574-c. 1640), playwright The Parliament of Bees
Martin Day, (born 1969), novelist and screenwriter, Dr. Who spinoffs
Thomas Day, (1748–1789), children's writer
Cecil Day-Lewis, (1904–1972), Poet Laureate, translator and novelist
Louis de Bernières, (born 1954), novelist, Captain Corelli's Mandolin
Alain de Botton, (born 1969), writer, novelist and essayist
Walter de la Mare, (early pen name Walter Ramal, 1873–1956), poet and novelist
William De Morgan, (1839–1917), novelist and potter
Thomas de Quincey, (1785–1859), essayist and critic, Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
Hugh de Selincourt, (1878–1951), writer and journalist
Lisa St Aubin de Terán, (born 1953), novelist, poet and autobiographer
Edward de Vere, earl of Oxford, (1550–1604), playwright, poet and courtier
Roger Deakin, (1943–2006), writer on the countryside
Geoffrey Dearmer, (1893–1996), poet
Percy Dearmer, (1867–1936), reformer and cleric, The Parson's Handbook
John Dee, (1527-1608/9), mathematician, occultist and political economist
Warwick Deeping, (1877–1950), novelist and story writer, Sorrell and Son
Daniel Defoe, (c. 1659–1731), novelist and pamphleteer, Robinson Crusoe
Paul Dehn, (1912–1976), screenwriter and playwright
Len Deighton, (born 1929), military historian, cookery writer and novelist, The Ipcress File
Thomas Dekker, (1572–1632), playwright
E. M. Delafield, (1890–1943), novelist
Mary Delany, (born Mary Granville), (1700-17880, letter writer, artist and bluestocking
R. F. Delderfield, (1912–1972), novelist and playwright, A Horseman Riding By
Ethel M. Dell (1881–1939), novelist
Thomas Deloney, (1553–1600), balladeer and novelist
John Denham, (1614/15-1669), poet
George Dennis, (1814–1898), writer and explorer
John Dennis, (1657–1734), critic and playwright
Nigel Dennis, (1912–1989), writer, novelist and playwright
Colin Dexter, (born 1930), novelist, Inspector Morse novels
Nirpal Singh Dhaliwal, (born 1974), novelist and journalist
William Diaper, (1685–1717), poet and translator
Charles Dibdin, (1745?–1814), playwright, poet and songwriter
Charles Dickens, (1812–1870), novelist, David Copperfield
Monica Dickens, (1915–1992), novelist and children's writer
Anne Hepple Dickinson, (pen name Anne Hepple, 1877–1959), novelist
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, (1862–1932), historian and political activist
Patric Dickinson, (1914–1994), poet, translator and playwright
Peter Dickinson, (born 1927), novelist, children's writer and poet
Kenelm Digby, (1603–1665), natural philosopher
Leonard Digges, (1588–1635), poet and translator
Francis Dillingham, (died 1625), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Wentworth Dillon, earl of Roscommon, (1630–1685), poet, critic and translator
John Disney, (1677-1729/30), writer on moral reform, and cleric
John Disney, (1746–1816), religious writer, biographer and Unitarian minister
Jenny Diski, (born 1947), novelist and essayist, Rainforest
Isaac D'Israeli, (1766–1848), essayist
Benjamin Disraeli, (1804–1881), novelist and statesman
Henry Hall Dixon, (1822–1870), writer
Richard Watson Dixon, (1833–1900), poet and church historian
William Hepworth Dixon, (1821-1879), historian, biographer and travel writer
Sydney Thompson Dobell, (1824–1874), poet and critic
Henry Austin Dobson, (1840–1921), poet and essayist
William Dodd, (1729–1777), writer, cleric and forger
John Doddridge, (1555-1628), writer, antiquary and judge
Philip Doddridge, (1702–1751), religious writer and hymn writer
George Bubb Dodington, (1691–1792), politician, poet and diarist
Robert Dodsley, (1704–1764), poet, writer and bookseller
Christina Dodwell, (born 1951), travel writer
Berlie Doherty, (born 1943), children's writer, poet and dramatist
Paul C. Doherty, (several pen names, born 1946), novelist
Digby Mackworth Dolben, (1848–1867), poet
Alfred Domett, (1811–1887), poet and statesman
John Donne, (1572–1631), poet and divine
Desmond Donnelly, (1920–1974), writer, journalist and politician
Eleanor Doorly, (died 1950), children's writer
Sarah Doudney, (1841–1926), novelist, children's writer and hymn writer
Charles Montagu Doughty, (1843–1926), poet, writer and traveller, Travels in Arabia Deserta
Louise Doughty, (born 1963), novelist and playwright
Keith Douglas, (1920–1944), poet
Lord Alfred Douglas, (1870–1945), poet
Norman Douglas, (1868–1952), novelist, South Wind
Siobhan Dowd, (born 1960), children's writer, Bog Child
Andrew Downes, (c. 1549-1628), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Jenny Downham, (born 1964), novelist
Ernest Dowson, (1867–1900), poet and story writer
Arthur Conan Doyle, (1859–1930), novelist and author of Sherlock Holmes
Richard Doyle, (born 1948), novelist, Flood
Francis Hastings Doyle, (1810–1888), poet
Margaret Drabble, (born 1939), novelist and critic, The Millstone
Phil Drabble, (1914–2007), writer and broadcaster
Nick Drake, (born 1961), poet and novelist
Augusta Theodosia Drane, (1823–1894), writer and nun
Michael Drayton, (1563–1631), poet
John Drinkwater, (1882–1937), poet and playwright
Henry Drummond, (1786–1860), religious writer, politician and banker
John Dryden, (1631–1700), poet and playwright, Absalom and Achitophel
Daphne du Maurier, (1907–1989), novelist, Rebecca
George du Maurier, (1834–1896), cartoonist and novelist, Trilby
Stephen Duck, (1705?–1756), poet and cleric
Agnes Mary Frances Duclaux, (1857–1944), poet and author
Ernest Dudley, (real name Vivian Ernest Coltman-Allen, 1908–2006), novelist, screenwriter and actor
Lord Dufferin, (1826–1902), writer and explorer
Charles Duff, (1894–1966), language-book writer, translator and satirist
Maureen Duffy, (born 1933), poet, screenwriter and novelist
Stella Duffy, (born 1963), novelist and playwright
William Dugdale, (1605–1686), antiquary
Alfred Duggan, (1903–1964), historical writer and novelist
Ian Duhig, (born 1954), poet
Richard Duke, (1658–1711), poet and cleric
Sarah Dunant, (born 1950), writer and novelist
John Duncombe, (1729–1786), poet and cleric
William Duncombe, (1690–1769), translator and playwright
Roderic Dunkerley (1884–1966), religious writer
Helen Dunmore, (born 1952), poet, novelist and children's writer,
Antony Dunn, (born 1973), poet and playwright
Nell Dunn, (born 1936), novelist and playwright, Poor Cow
James Duport, (1606–1679), scholar and cleric
John Duport, (died 1617), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Thomas D'Urfey, (1653–1723), playwright and poet, Wit and Mirth, or Pills to Purge Melancholy
Raymond Durgnat, (1932–2002), film critic
Edith Durham, (1863–1944), travel writer
Gerald Durrell, (1925–1995), naturalist and author, My Family and Other Animals
Lawrence Durrell, (1921–1990), novelist and poet, The Alexandria Quartet
John Dunton, (1659–1733), writer, bookseller and pamphleteer
Edward Dyer, (1543–1607), poet and courtier
Geoff Dyer, (born 1958), writer
George Dyer, (1755–1841), scholar and poet
[edit]
E
John Earle, (1601–1665), writer and bishop
Anthony Earnshaw, (1924–2001), writer and illustrator
Edward Backhouse Eastwick, (1814-1883), orientalist and diplomat
Laurence Echard, (1670–1730), historian and translator
Arthur Stanley Eddington, (1882–1944), astrophysicist and science writer
E. R. Eddison, (1882–1945), novelist, poet and translator, the Zimiamvian Trilogy
Emily Eden, (1797–1869), novelist
Frederick Morton Eden, (1766–1809), social researcher
Richard Edes, (1555–1604), religious writer, AV translator and cleric
David Edgar, (born 1948), playwright
Maria Edgeworth, (1767–1849), novelist, Castle Rackrent
Richard Lovell Edgeworth, (1744–1817), writer and politician
Robert Edric, (real name Gary Edric Armitage, born 1956), novelist
J. T. Edson, (born 1928), novelist
Richard Edwardes, (c. 1523-1566), poet and playwright, Damon and Pythias
Amelia Edwards, (1831–1892), novelist and travel writer
Thomas Edwards, (d. 1599), poet
Pierce Egan, (1772–1849), journalist and sports writer, Boxiana
Pierce Egan the younger (1814–1880), novelist
Elizabeth Egerton, (born Cavendish, 1626–1663), poet and dramatist
George Egerton, (real name Mary Chavelita Bright, 1859–1945), writer, translator and feminist
Rowland Egerton-Warburton, (1804–1891), poet and landowner
Sarah Fyge Egerton, (1670–1723), poet
Thomas Egerton, Lord Ellesmere, later Lord Brackley (1540–1617), statesman and patron
Stephen Elboz, (born 1956), children's writer
Josephine Elder, (real name Olive Gwendoline Potter, 1895–1988), children's writer
Peter Berresford Ellis, (pen names Peter Tremayne and Peter MacAlan, born 1943), novelist
Charles Eliot, (1862–1931), travel writer, malacologist and diplomat
George Eliot, (real name Mary Ann Evans, 1819–1880), novelist, Middlemarch
T. S. Eliot, (1888–1965), poet, playwright and critic, Nobel prizewinner, The Waste Land
Frances Minto Elliot, (1820-1898), historical writer and novelist
Ebenezer Elliott, (the "Corn Law Rhymer", 1781–1849), poet
Edith Ellis, (1861–1916), writer and anthologist
Edwin John Ellis, (1848–1916), poet, editor and illustrator
Havelock Ellis, (1859–1939), sexologist, social reformer and literary editor
Royston Ellis, (born 1941), novelist and poet
Warren Ellis, (born 1968), graphic novelist and comic book writer
R. J. Ellory, (born 1965), novelist
Elizabeth Elstob, (1683–1756), scholar and translator
Ben Elton, (born 1959), novelist, playwright and comedian
Oliver Elton, (1861–1945), scholar and translator,
Alfred Elwes, (1819–1888), children's writer and translator
Thomas Elyot, (c. 1490-1536), scholar and diplomat
Sally Emerson, (born 1954), novelist and anthologist
William Empson, (1906–1984), critic and poet, Seven Types of Ambiguity
William Enfield, (1741–1797), elocutionist and Unitarian minister
Barry England, (1932–2009), novelist
Isobel English, (real name June Guesdon Braybrooke, 1920–1994), novelist
D. J. Enright, (1920–2002), poet and critic
Sam Enthoven, (born 1975), children's writer
Ephelia, (fl. 1679, real name probably Mary Stewart, Duchess of Richmond), poet
Susan Ertz, (1894–1985), novelist
George Etherege, (c. 1635–c. 1692), playwright, The Man of Mode
Abel Evans, (1679–1737), poet and cleric
Arthur Evans, (1851–1941), archaeologist
Arthur Benoni Evans, (1781–1854), poet, scholar and cleric
John Evans, (1823–1908), archaeologist
Margiad Evans, (real name Peggy Eileen Williams, 1909–1958), novelist, poet and illustrator
Nicholas Evans, (born 1950), novelist, The Horse Whisperer
Paul Evans, (1945–1991), poet
John Evelyn, (1620–1706), writer and diarist, Sylva, A Discourse of Forest Trees
Peter Everett, (1931–1999), novelist
Evelyn Everett-Green, (1856–1932), novelist and children's writer
George Every, (1909–2003), theologian and poet
Gavin Ewart, (1916–1995), poet and anthologist
Barbara Ewing, (born 1944), novelist and playwright
Juliana Horatia Ewing, (1841–1885), children's writer, Mrs. Overtheway's Remembrances
Vincent Eyre, (1811–1881), military writer and general
[edit]
F
Frederick William Faber, (1814–1863), hymn writer and theologian, Faith of Our Fathers
Geoffrey Faber, (1889–1961), poet and publisher
George Stanley Faber, (1773–1854), theologian and cleric
Robert Fabyan, (died 1513), diarist and chronicler
Harry Fainlight, (1935–1982), poet
Ruth Fainlight, (born 1932), poet, writer and translator
Thomas Fairfax, (1612–1671), poet and army commander-in-chief
J. Meade Falkner, (1858–1932), novelist, Moonfleet
Mildmay Fane, earl of Westmorland (1602–1666), poet and playwright
Violet Fane, (real name Mary Montgomerie Lamb, 1843–1905), novelist and poet
Catherine Maria Fanshawe, (1765–1834), poet
Richard Fanshawe, (1608–1666), poet and translator
U. A. Fanthorpe, (1929–2009), poet
Helen Farish, (born 1962), poet
Benjamin Farjeon, (1838–1903), novelist and playwright
Eleanor Farjeon, (1881–1965), children's author and poet
Herbert Farjeon, (1887–1945), dramatist and critic
Paul Farley, (born 1965), poet
Jeffery Farnol, (1878–1952), novelist
Frederic William Farrar, (known as Dean Farrar, 1831–1903), novelist, religious writer and cleric, Eric, or, Little by Little
J. G. Farrell, (1935–1979), novelist, The Siege of Krishnapur
Sebastian Faulks, (born 1953), novelist
Joseph Fawcett, (1758–1804), poet and cleric
Francis Fawkes, (1721–1777), poet and translator
Eliza Fay, (1755/6-1816), correspondent and traveller
John Russell Fearn, (1908–1960), novelist
Daniel Featley, (also known as Fairclough, 1582–1645), controversialist, AV translator and cleric
Vicki Feaver, (born 1943), poet
Elaine Feinstein, (born 1930), poet, novelist and dramatist
John Fell, (1625–1686), scholar and cleric
Owen Feltham or Felltham (c. 1602–1668), aphorist and essayist
George Manville Fenn, (1831–1909), novelist and children's writer
John Fenn (died 1615), religious writer and RC priest
John Fenn, (1739–1794), antiquary and editor
Elijah Fenton, (1683–1730), poet
James Fenton, (born 1949), poet and critic
Roger Fenton, (1565–1615), religious writer, AV translator and cleric
Eliza Fenwick, (1766–1840), novelist and children's writer
Ruby Ferguson, (1899–1966), novelist and children's writer
Bernard Fergusson, Lord Ballantrae, (1911–1980), military historian and army general
Patrick Leigh Fermor, (born 1915), travel writer and scholar
Elizabeth Ferrars, (1907–1995), novelist
Jasper Fforde, (born 1961), novelist
Michael Field, pen name of Katherine Harris Bradley (1846–1914) and Edith Emma Cooper (1862–1913), poets and diarists
Daphne Fielding, (1904-1997), writer and biographer
Helen Fielding, (born 1958), novelist, screenwriter and journalist, Bridget Jones's Diary
Henry Fielding, (1707–1754), novelist and poet, Tom Jones
Sarah Fielding, (1709–1768), novelist and children's writer
Xan Fielding, (1918-1991), writer, translator and soldier
Celia Fiennes, (1662–1741), diarist and travel writer
William Fiennes, (born 1970), writer
Eva Figes, (born 1932), novelist and critic
Robert Filmer, (1588–1653), political writer
Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea, (1661–1720), poet
Anne Fine, (born 1947), novelist and children's writer
Cordelia Fine, (born c. 1940s), academic psychologist and writer
George Finlay, (1799–1875), historian
Ronald Firbank, (1886–1926), novelist and playwright, Valmouth
Charles Harding Firth, (1857-1936), historian and biographer
Tibor Fischer, (born 1959), novelist
Allen Fisher, (born 1944), poet and editor
John Fisher, (1469–1535), theologian, cardinal and martyr
Roy Fisher, (born 1930), poet and jazz pianist
Edward Fitzgerald, (1809–1883), poet and translator, The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
Thomas Flatman, (1638–1688), poet and miniaturist
James Elroy Flecker, (1884–1915), poet, novelist and playwright
Richard Flecknoe, (c. 1600-c. 1678), poet, playwright and writer
Ian Fleming, (1908–1964), author, creator of James Bond
Peter Fleming, (1907–1971), travel writer and traveller
Giles Fletcher, (1586–1623), poet
Giles Fletcher, (c. 1548-1611), poet
J. S. Fletcher, (1863–1935), novelist and journalist
John Fletcher, (1579–1625), playwright
Phineas Fletcher, (1582–1650), poet
Susan Fletcher, (born 1979), novelist
Thomas Fletcher, (1666–1713), poet, translator and cleric
F. S. Flint, (1885–1960), poet
John Florio, (1553–1625), lexicographer and translator
Robert Fludd, (1574–1637), physician and occultist
Giles Foden, (born 1967), novelist
Winifred Foley, (1914-2009), autobiographer and novelist
Albany Fonblanque, (1794–1872), journalist and editor
Samuel Foote, (1720–1777), playwright and theater manager
Duncan Forbes, (born 1947), poet
Anne Ford, (1737–1824), writer, musician and actress
Ford Madox Ford, (original name Ford Madox Hueffer, 1873–1939), novelist and poet
John Ford, (1586–1640), playwright, 'Tis Pity She's a Whore
Richard Ford, (1796–1858), travel writer, A Handbook for Travellers in Spain
Thomas Ford or Forde, (1580–1648), poet and composer
Michael Foreman, (born 1938), children's writer and illustrator
C. S. Forester, (1899–1966), author, the Horatio Hornblower series
Simon Forman, (1552–1611), astrologer, occultist and herbalist
David Forrest, novelist, a pseudonym of R. Forrest-Webb and David Eliades
Helen Forrester, (born 1919), writer
E. M. Forster, (1879–1970), author, A Passage to India
John Forster, (1812–1876), biographer and critic
Margaret Forster, (born 1938), novelist and biographer
Frederick Forsyth, (born 1938), novelist, The Day of the Jackal
Adam Foulds, (born 1974), novelist and poet
Edith Henrietta Fowler, (1865–1944), novelist
Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler, (1860–1929), novelist
Henry Watson Fowler, (1858–1933), and Francis George Fowler, (1871–1918), lexicographers and grammarians, Fowler's Modern English Usage
John Fowles, (1926–2005), novelist and essayist, The French Lieutenant's Woman
George Fox, (1624–1691), diarist and Quaker
Robin Lane Fox, (born 1946), historian and gardening writer
Edgar Foxall, (1906–1990), poet
John Foxe, (1517–1587, writer, Foxe's Book of Martyrs
Dick Francis, (1920–2010), novelist and jockey, Dead Cert
Philip Francis, (1740–1818), pamphleteer and translator
Gilbert Frankau, (1884–1952), novelist and poet
Julia Frankau, (pen name Frank Danby, 1863–1916), novelist
John Franklin, (1786–1847), explorer and novelist
Antonia Fraser, (born 1932), biographer and novelist
Michael Frayn, (born 1933), playwright and novelist, Copenhagen
Margaret Frazer, (pseudonym, fl. 1990s onwards), novelist
Jonathan Freedland, (born 1967), writer
Edward Augustus Freeman, (1823–1892), historian
John Freeman, (1880–1929), poet
R. Austin Freeman, (1862–1943), novelist
Elizabeth Wynne Fremantle, (1779–1857), diarist
Celia Fremlin, (1914–2009), novelist
Patrick French, (born 1966), biographer and author
John Hookham Frere, (1769–1846), poet and translator
James Anthony Froude, (1818–1894), historian
Richard Hurrell Froude, (1803–1836), poet, religious writer and cleric
Caroline Fry, (1787–1846), religious writer and poet
Christopher Fry, (1907–2005), dramatist
Stephen Fry, (born 1957), novelist and comedian
John Fuller, (born 1937), poet, novelist and anthologist
Roy Fuller, (1912–1991), poet and novelist
Thomas Fuller, (1608–1661), author and cleric
Georgiana Fullerton, (born Leverson-Gower, 1812–1885), novelist
Ulpian Fulwell, (1545/6-c. 1585), playwright, satirist and cleric
Monica Furlong, (1930–2003), religious writer, biographer and journalist
Frederick James Furnivall, (1825–1910), philologist and lexicographer
[edit]
G
Neil Gaiman, (born 1960), novelist, graphic novelist and screenwriter
Norman Gale, (1862–1942), poet
John Galsworthy, (1867–1933), author and dramatist, The Forsyte Saga
Francis Galton, (1822–1911), polymath
Jane Gardam, (born 1928), novelist and children's writer
Samuel Rawson Gardiner, (1829–1902), historian
Helen Gardner, (1908–1986), critic and scholar
John Gardner, (1926–2007), novelist, The Liquidator
Leon Garfield (1921–1996), novelist and children's writer
Simon Garfield, (born 1960), writer
Alex Garland, (born 1970), novelist and screenwriter
Alan Garner, (born 1934), children's writer, The Owl Service
Constance Garnett, (1861–1946), translator
David Garnett, (1892–1981), novelist, editor and playwright, Lady into Fox
Edward Garnett, (1868–1937), author and critic
Eve Garnett, (1900–1991), children's writer and illustrator, The Family from One End Street
Richard Garnett, (1835–1906), scholar and poet
David Garrick, (1717–1779), actor, playwright and poet
Samuel Garth, (1661–1719), poet and physician
George Gascoigne, (1535–1577), poet and translator
David Gascoyne, (1916–2001), poet
Elizabeth Gaskell, (1810–1865), novelist, Cranford
Jane Gaskell, (born 1941), fantasy novelist
Francis Aidan Gasquet, (1846–1929), historian and cardinal
Alfred Gatty, (1813–1903), writer and cleric
Margaret Gatty, (wrote as Mrs. Alfred Gatty, 1809–1873), children's writer
John Gauden, (1605–1662), writer and bishop, Eikon Basilike (attributed)
Jamila Gavin, (born 1941), novelist
John Gay, (1685–1732), poet and playwright, The Beggar's Opera
Maggie Gee, (born 1948), novelist, The Ice People
Pam Gems, (born 1925), playwright
Emily Gerard, (1849–1905), novelist
John Gerard, (1545-1611/12), herbalist
William Gerhardie, (born Gerhardi, 1895–1977), novelist
Karen Gershon, (1923–1993), poet, writer and novelist
Edward Gibbon, (1737–1794), history, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Stella Gibbons, (1902–1989), novelist and poet, Cold Comfort Farm
Philip Gibbs, (1877–1962), writer and journalist
Wilfred Wilson Gibson, (1878–1962), poet
John Gifford, (1758–1818), historical and political writer, Anti-Jacobin Review
William Gifford, (1756–1826), poet and satirist
W. S. Gilbert, (1836–1911), playwright, librettist and poet, The Mikado
William Gilbert or Gilberd, (1544–1603), scientist, De Magnete...
William Gilbert, (1804-1890), novelist and naval surgeon
Alexander Gilchrist, (1828–1861), biographer and critic
Anne Gilchrist, (born Burrows, 1828–1885), writer
Morris Ginsberg, (1879–1970), sociologist
George Gissing, (1857–1903), novelist, New Grub Street
William Gladstone, (1809–1898), statesman and writer
Lesley Glaister, (born 1956), novelist and playwright
Joseph Glanvill, (1636–1680), writer, philosopher and cleric
Hannah Glasse, (1708–1770), writer on cookery and housekeeping, The Art of Cookery
Victoria Glendinning, (born 1937), biographer and novelist
Richard Glover, (1712–1785), poet and playwright
Elinor Glyn, (1864–1943), novelist
Rumer Godden, (1907–1998), novelist, children's writer and biographer, The Diddakoi
A. D. Godley, (1856–1925), comic poet
Sidney Godolphin, (1610–1643), poet
William Godwin, (1756–1836), novelist and philosopher
Louis Golding, (1895–1958), novelist and poet
William Golding, (1911–1993), novelist, poet and Nobel prizewinner, The Lord of the Flies
Douglas Goldring, (1887–1960), poet, travel writer and novelist
Laurence Gomme, (1853-1916), writer on folklore and public servant
Jason Goodwin, (born 1964), novelist and travel writer
Barnabe Googe or Gooche, (1540–1594), poet and translator
Catherine Gore, (1799–1861), novelist and playwright
Charles Gore, (1853–1932), theologian and bishop
Edmund Gosse, (1849–1928), poet, critic and author, Father and Son
Philip Henry Gosse, (1810–1888), writer on science and natural history
Stephen Gosson, (1554–1624), satirist and playwright
Elizabeth Goudge, (1900–1984), novelist and children's writer
Gerald Gould, (1885–1936), poet and journalist
Nathaniel Gould, (1857–1919), novelist
John Gower, (c. 1330–1408), poet
Eleanor Graham, (1896–1984), children's writer, editor and anthologist
Harry Graham, (1874–1936), humorist and poet
Stephen Graham, (1884–1975), travel writer and novelist
Kenneth Grahame, (1859–1931), writer, The Wind in the Willows
Sarah Grand, (real name Mrs. David C. M'Fall, born Frances Elizabeth Clarke, 1854–1943), novelist and suffragist
John Grant, (pen names Jonathan Gash and Graham Gaunt, born 1933), novelist and physician
Linda Grant, (born 1951), novelist and writer
George Granville, 1st Baron Lansdowne, (1666–1735), playwright and poet
Harley Granville-Barker, (1877–1946), playwright and actor
Richard Graves, (1715–1804), poet and novelist
Robert Graves, (1895–1985), poet, scholar and novelist, I, Claudius
John Gray, (1866–1934), poet and translator
Patience Gray, (1917–2005), cookery writer
Thomas Gray, (1716–1771), poet, Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
Candida Lycett Green, (born 1942), writer and journalist
Henry Green, (pen name of Henry Vincent Yorke), (1905–1973), novelist
John Richard Green, (1837–1883), historian
Matthew Green, (1696–1737), poet
Roger Lancelyn Green, (1918–1987), biographer and children's writer
Sarah Green, (fl. 1790-1825), novelist
Thomas Hill Green, (1836–1882), philosopher and radical
Kate Greenaway, (1846–1901), children's author and illustrator
Graham Greene, (1904–1991), novelist and playwright, Our Man in Havana
Robert Greene, (1558–1592), playwright and pamphleteer
Chris Greenhalgh, (born 1963), novelist, screenwriter and poet
Lavinia Greenlaw, (born 1962), poet and novelist
Frederick Greenwood, (1830-1909), journalist and man of letters
James Greenwood, (c. 1830/35-1929), children's writer and investigative journalist
Walter Wilson Greg, (1875–1959), bibliographer and editor
Joyce Grenfell, (1910–1979), writer, actress and comedian
Julian Grenfell, (1888–1915), poet
Charles Greville, (1794–1865), diarist and cricketer
Frances Greville, (c. 1724–1789), poet
Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke, (1554–1628), poet and playwright
Bill Griffiths, (1948–2007), poet, scholar and translator
Jane Griffiths, (born 1970), poet and lecturer
Paul Griffiths, (born 1947), novelist, librettist and music critic
John Grigg, (1924-2001), biographer and journalist
Geoffrey Grigson, (1905–1985), poet and editor
Arthur Grimble, (1888–1956), writer, anthropologist and colonial governor
Francis Grose, (1731–1791), antiquary and lexicographer
John Gross, (born 1935), critic, writer and anthologist
Philip Gross, (born 1952), poet, novelist and playwright
George Grossmith, (1847–1912), writer and entertainer, co-author of Diary of a Nobody
Weedon Grossmith, (1854–1919), writer, artist and actor, co-author of Diary of a Nobody
George Grote, (1794–1871), classical historian and reformer
George Grove, (1820–1900), editor and writer on music, Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians
Sydney Grundy, (1848–1914), playwright and librettist
Philip Guedalla, (1889–1944), historian, biographer and travel writer
Harry Guest, (born 1932), poet
Thom Gunn, (1929–2004), poet
Edmund Gurney, (1847-1888), writer and psychologist
Ivor Gurney, (1890–1937), poet and composer
Thomas Anstey Guthrie, (pen name F. Anstey, 1856–1934), novelist and journalist, Vice Versa
Bernard Gutteridge, (1916–1985), poet
Brion Gysin, (1916–1986), sound poet, novelist and painter
[edit]
H
Jen Hadfield, (born 1978), poet
William Habington, (1605–1654), poet
Mark Haddon, (born 1962), novelist, children's writer and poet, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
Henry Rider Haggard, (1856–1925), novelist and story writer, King Solomon's Mines
Richard Hakluyt, (c. 1552/3-1616), travel writer, translator and cleric, Discourse Concerning Western Planting
J. B. S. Haldane, (1892–1964), scientist and communist, On Being the Right Size
Kathleen Hale, (1898–2000), children's writer and illustrator, Orlando the Marmalade Cat
Anne Halkett, (1623–1699), memoirist and religious writer
Edward Hall or Halle, (c. 1498–1547), chronicler
Evelyn Beatrice Hall, (pen name S. G. Tallentyre, 1868-1919), biographer and translator
Henry Hall, (c. 1656-1707), poet and composer
Joseph Hall, (1574–1656), satirist, moralist and bishop
Radclyffe Hall, (1880–1943), novelist and poet, The Well of Loneliness
Sarah Hall (writer), (born 1974), novelist and poet
Simon Hall, (born 1969), novelist and broadcaster
Steven Hall, (born 1975), novelist and playwright
Tarquin Hall, (born 1969), writer and journalist
Thomas Hall, (1610–1665), religious writer and cleric
Arthur Hallam, (1811–1833), poet
Henry Hallam, (1777–1859), historian
James Halliwell-Phillipps, (1820–1889), Shakespearean scholar and biographer
Bruce Barrymore Halpenny (born early 20th c.), author
A. H. Halsey, (born 1923), sociologist
Alan Halsey, (born 1947), poet
Michael Hamburger, (1924–2007), writer, poet and translator
Philip Gilbert Hamerton, (pen name Adolphus Segrave, 1834-1894), writer and artist
Charles Hamilton, (25 pen names including Frank Richards, 1876–1961), children's writer, Billy Bunter
Cicely Mary Hamilton, (1872–1952), writer, playwright and feminist
Cosmo Hamilton, (1870–1942), playwright and novelist
Ian Hamilton, (1938–2001), critic, biographer and poet
Peter F. Hamilton, (born 1960), SF novelist
Edward Bruce Hamley, (1824–1893), military theorist and novelist
Edward Hamley, (1764–1834), poet and cleric
William Hampton, (born 1959), poet
Marika Hanbury-Tenison, (1938–1982), cookery and travel writer
St. John Hankin, (1869–1909), playwright
James Hanley, (1897–1985), novelist and screenwriter
Sophie Hannah, (born 1971), poet and novelist
John Harding (died 1610), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Frances Hardinge, (born 1973), children's writer
Mollie Hardwick, (1916–2003), novelist and writer of TV spinoffs
Ronald Hardy, (born 1919), novelist
Thomas Hardy, (1840–1928), novelist and poet, The Mayor of Casterbridge
Augustus Hare, (1834–1903), travel writer and raconteur
Augustus William Hare, (1792–1834), essayist and cleric
Cyril Hare, (real name A. A. G. Clark, 1900–1958), novelist
David Hare, (born 1947), playwright, Racing Demon
Julius Charles Hare, (1795–1855), religious writer
Roger Hargreaves, (1935–1988), children's writer and illustrator, Mr. Men series
John Harington, (1561–1612), poet, translator and courtier
John Harmar, (c. 1555-1613), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Cynthia Harnett, (1893–1981), children's writer
Charles George Harper, (1863–1943), travel writer and illustrator
Beatrice Harraden, (1864–1936), novelist, lexicographer and suffragist
James Harington, (1611–1677), political writer
Frank Harris, (1856–1931), writer, editor and autobiographer
James Harris, (1709–1780), philosopher and grammarian
Joanne Harris, (born 1964), novelist, Chocolat
Robert Harris, (born 1957), novelist, writer and screenplay writer
Rosemary Harris, (born 1923), children's writer, The Moon in the Cloud
Austin Harrison, (1873–1928), editor and writer
Thomas Harrison, (1555–1631), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Tony Harrison, (born 1938), poet and playwright
William Harrison, (1534–1593), writer and cleric
Tom Harrisson, (also wrote as T. H. Harrisson, 1911–1976), conservationist and polymath, Mass-Observation with Humphrey Jennings and Charles Madge.
David Harsent, (pen names Jack Curtis and David Lawrence, born 1942), novelist, poet and scriptwriter
B. H. Liddell Hart, (1895–1970), military historian and army officer
Adam Hart-Davis, (born 1943), writer, scientist and broadcaster
Duff Hart-Davis, (born 1936), biographer and naturalist
Walter Harte, (1709–1774), poet and historian
David Hartley, (1705–1757), philosopher and psychologist
John Hartley, (1839–1915), poet and writer in Yorkshire dialect
L. P. Hartley, (1895–1972), novelist, The Go-Between
Frederick William Harvey, (1888–1957), poet
Gabriel Harvey, (c. 1545–1630), poet and writer
William Harvey, (1578–1657), physician
Lee Harwood, (born 1939), poet
Christopher Hassall, (1912–1963), playwright, actor and poet
Michael Hastings, (born 1938), playwright, novelist and screenwriter
Richard Hathwaye, (fl. 1597–1603), playwright
Joseph Hatton, (1841–1907), novelist and editor
Robert Harris, (born 1957), novelist and writer
John Harvey, (born 1938), novelist
William Haughton, (died 1605), playwright
Frances Ridley Havergal, (1836–1879), poet and hymn writer
Stephen Hawes, (c. 1474–1523), poet
Robert Stephen Hawker, (1803–1875), poet and cleric, The Song of the Western Men
John Hawkesworth, (1715–1773), writer, editor and dramatist
John Hawkins, (1719–1789), writer and biographer
Spike Hawkins, (born 1943), poet and performer
Laetitia Matilda Hawkins, (1759–1835), novelist
Roy Hay, (1910–1989), gardening writer, journalist and broadcaster
Anna Haycraft, (pen name Alice Thomas Ellis, 1932–2005), novelist
William Hayley, (1745–1820), poet, playwright and biographer
Carole Hayman, (born 1950s?), novelist, screenwriter and actor
Robert Hayman, (1575–1629), poet and colonist
Mary Hays, (1759–1843), novelist
Alethea Hayter, (1911–2006), biographer and historical writer
William Hayter (diplomat), (1906–1995), political writer and diplomat
Abraham Hayward, (1801–1884), essayist
John Hayward, (c. 1560-1627), historian
Eliza Haywood, (1793–1756), novelist, playwright and poet
C. H. Hazlewood, (1823–1875),
William Hazlitt, (1778–1830), essayist and literary critic
Mary Hearne (fl. 1718), novelist
Thomas Hearne or Hearn (1678–1735), antiquary and scholar
Ambrose Heath, (born Francis Geoffrey Miller, 1891–1969), cookery writer and translator
John Heath-Stubbs, (1918–2006), poet, translator and anthologist
Reginald Heber, (1783–1826), hymn writer and bishop, The Son of God Goes Forth to War
Richard Heber, (1773–1833), classical scholar and editor
Zoë Heller, (born 1965), novelist and journalist
Elizabeth Helme, (c. 1753-c. 1812), novelist and translator
Arthur Helps, (1813–1875), writer and biographer
Racey Helps, (1913–1970), children's writer
Felicia Hemans, (1793–1835), poet
Samuel Henley, (1740–1815), poet and writer
William Ernest Henley, (1849–1903), poet
Robert Henriques, (1905–1967), novelist and biographer
John Stevens Henslow, (1796–1861), botanist, geologist and cleric
G. A. Henty, (1832–1902), novelist
Philip Hensher, (born 1965), novelist and critic
Rayner Heppenstall, (1911–1981), novelist and poet
A. P. Herbert, (1890–1971), humorist, novelist and playwright, Holy Deadlock
Edward Herbert, Lord Herbert of Cherbury (1583–1648), poet and soldier
George Herbert, (1593–1633), poet
James Herbert, (born 1943), novelist, The Rats
Mary Herbert, countess of Pembroke, (1561–1621), poet and translator, The Countesse of Pembroke's Arcadia
Robert Herrick, (1591–1674), poet
James Herriot, (pen name of James Alfred Wight), (1916–1995), writer
Elizabeth Hervey, (1759–1824), novelist
John Hervey, (1696–1743), political writer, memoirist and courtier
D. G. Hessayon, (born 1928), gardening writer
Maurice Hewlett, (1861–1923), historical novelist and poet
Christopher Heydon, (1561–1623), writer on astrology
John Heydon, (1629–c. 1667), astrologer and occult philosopher
Georgette Heyer, (1902–1974), novelist a
Peter Heylin or Heylyn, (1600–1662), controversialist and cleric
Jasper Heywood, (1535–1598), poet and translator
John Heywood, (c. 1497-c. 1580), playwright and poet
Thomas Heywood, (early 1570s–1641), playwright, A Woman Killed with Kindness
Eleanor Hibbert, (born Eleanor Alice Burford, pen names Jean Plaidy, Victoria Holt, Philippa Carr, etc., 1906–1993), novelist
Robert Smythe Hichens, (1864-1950), novelist and journalist, The Green Carnation
William Hickey, (1749–1830), memoirist
Jack Higgins, (pen name of Harry Patterson, born 1929), novelist
Susanna Highmore, (1690–1750), poet
Aaron Hill, (1685–1750), playwright and writer
Christopher Hill, (1912–2003), historian
Geoffrey Hill, (born 1932), poet and academic
John Hill, (c. 1716–1775), novelist, journalist and botanist
Justin Hill, (born 1971), novelist, biographer and translator
Lorna Hill, (1902-1991), children's writer and novelist
Reginald Hill, (born 1936), novelist, the Dalziel and Pascoe stories
Selima Hill, (born 1945), poet
Susan Hill, (born 1942), novelist and author, The Woman in Black
Tobias Hill, (born 1970), novelist and poet
James Hilton, (1900–1954), novelist, Lost Horizon
Walter Hilton, (1340–1396), mystic
Barry Hines, (born 1939), novelist
Henry Hitchings, (born 1974), writer and scholar
Alfred Hitchcock, (1899–1980), screen writer and director
Christopher Eric Hitchens, (born 1949), author and journalist
Benjamin Hoadly, (1676–1761), religious controversialist and absentee bishop
Richard Colt Hoare, (1758–1838), diarist and antiquary
Thomas Hobbes, (1588–1679), political philosopher, Leviathan
Peter Hobbs, (born 1973), novelist
Joseph Hocking, (1860–1937), novelist and cleric
Silas Hocking, (1850–1935), novelist and cleric
Jane Aiken Hodge, (1917–2009), novelist
Ralph Hodgson, (1871–1962), poet and translator
Shadworth Hodgson, (1832–1912), philosopher
W. N. Hodgson, (pen name Edward Melbourne, 1893–1916), poet
Barbara Hofland, (1770–1844), children's writer
Thomas Jefferson Hogg, (1792–1862), biographer
Pete Hoida, (born 1944), poet and painter
Thomas Holcroft, (1745–1809), playwright and miscellanist
Molly Holden, (1927–1981), poet
William Holder, (1616–1698), music scholar and cleric
Raphael Holinshed, (1529–1580), chronicler, translator and cleric
Jane Holland, (born 1966), poet, performance poet and novelist
Philemon Holland, (1552–1637), translator
Thomas Holland, (1539–1612), scholar, AV translator and cleric
William Holland, (1746–1819), diarist and cleric
Alan Hollinghurst, (born 1954), novelist and translator
John Holloway, (1920–1999), poet and scholar
Constance Holme, (1880–1955), novelist and playwright
Richard Holmes, (born 1945), biographer
Emily Sarah Holt, (1836–1893), novelist and children's writer
Hazel Holt, (born 1928), novelist
Winifred Holtby, (1898–1935), novelist
Stewart Home, (born 1962), novelist, writer and artist
Joseph Hone, (born 1937), novelist
William Hone, (1780–1842), satirist and bookseller
Thomas Hood, (1799–1845), poet and humorist
Tom Hood, (1835–1874), humorist, playwright and poet
Theodore Hook, (1788–1841), writer
Jeremy Hooker, (born 1941), poet, critic and broadcaster
Joseph Dalton Hooker, (1817–1911), botanist and explorer
Richard Hooker, (1554–1600), theologian
William Jackson Hooker, (1785–1865), botanist
John Hoole, (1727–1803), translator and poet
Alexander Beresford Hope, (1820–1887), writer
Anthony Hope, (real name Anthony Hope Hawkins, 1863–1933), novelist, The Prisoner of Zenda
Thomas Hope, (1769–1831), writer and novelist
Gerard Manley Hopkins, (1844–1889), poet, The Windhover: To Christ our Lord
Sydney Horler, (1888–1954), novelist, Checkmate
Nick Hornby, (born 1957), novelist
Alistair Horne, (born 1925), historian and biographer
Richard Henry Horne, (1802–1884), poet and critic
Roy Horniman, (1874–1930), novelist and playwright
E. W. Hornung, (1866–1921), author, the Raffles stories
Frances Horovitz, (1938–1983), poet and broadcaster
Michael Horovitz, (born 1935), poet and translator
Anthony Horowitz, (born 1956), novelist, children's writer and screenwriter
William Horwood, (born 1944), novelist and children's writer, Duncton Wood
John Hoskins or Hoskyns, (1566–1638), poet and politician
Stanley Houghton, (1881–1913), playwright
Geoffrey Household, (1900–1988), novelist, Rogue Male
A. E. Housman, (1859–1936), poet and scholar, A Shropshire Lad
Laurence Housman, (1865–1959), playwright
Anne Howard, (c. 1696-1764), poet
Brian Howard, (1905–1958), poet
Edward Howard, (1624-c. 1700), playwright and poet
Elizabeth Jane Howard, (born 1923), novelist
Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle, Earl of Carlisle (1748–1825), poet, playwright and pamphleteer
Hartley Howard, (1908–1979), (pen name of Leopold Horace Ognall), crime novelist
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, (1517–1547), poet
Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, (1540–1614), writer and courtier
John Howard, (1726–1790), philanthropist and reformer
Robert Howard, (1626–1698), playwright
David Armine Howarth, (1912–1991), historian and writer
James Howell, (1594–1666), Historiographer Royal and poet
Mary Howitt, (1799–1888), poet and translator, The Spider and the Fly
William Howitt, (1792–1879), writer and traveller
Edmond Hoyle, (1672–1769), writer on games and gaming
Sisley Huddleston, (1883–1952), writer and journalist
Stephen Hudson, (real name Sydney Schiff, 1868–1944), novelist and translator
Molly Hughes, (1866–1956), writer and educationalist
Richard Hughes, (1900–1976), poet, novelist and playwright, A High Wind in Jamaica
Shirley Hughes, (born 1927), children's writer and illustrator
Ted Hughes, (1930–1998), Poet Laureate, translator and anthologist, Birthday Letters
Thomas Hughes, (1822–1896), writer and novelist, Tom Brown's Schooldays
E. M. Hull, (real name Edith Maude Winstanley, 1880–1947), novelist, The Sheik
Katharine Hull, (1921–1977) and Pamela Whitlock (1920–1982), children's writers, The Far-Distant Oxus
T. E. Hulme, (1883–1917), critic and poet
Michael Hulse (born 1955), translator, critic and poet
Fergus Hume, (1859–1932), novelist
Tobias Hume, (c. 1590–1645), musician and poet
Leigh Hunt, (1784–1859), poet and essayist
Violet Hunt, (1862–1942), novelist and biographer
Rachel Hunter, (c. 1754-1813), novelist
Richard Hurd, (1720–1808), writer, translator and bishop
James Hurdis, (1763–1801), poet and cleric
Dyneley Hussey, (1893–1972), poet and music critic
A. S. M. Hutchinson, (1880–1971), novelist
John Hutchinson, (1674–1737), theologian
Lucy Hutchinson, (1620–1681), biographer and translator
R. C. Hutchinson, (1907–1975), novelist
Ralph Hutchinson, (c. 1553-1606), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Angela Huth, (born 1938), novelist and playwright
Leonard Hutten, (c. 1557-1632), scholar, AV translator and cleric
Catherine Hutton, (1856–1946), novelist and letter writer
Richard Holt Hutton, (1826–1897), writer and theologian
Aldous Huxley, (1884–1963), novelist and essayist, Brave New World
Julian Huxley, (1887–1975), biologist and science writer
Leonard Huxley, (1860–1933), writer, biographer and editor
Thomas Henry Huxley, (1825–1895), scientist and essayist, "Darwin's bulldog"
Edward Hyde, Lord Clarendon, (1609–1774), historian and statesman
Henry Hyndman, (1842–1921), writer and politician
Timothy Hyman, (b. 1946), art writer
C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne, (pen name Weatherby Chesney, 1866–1944), novelist, The Lost Continent: The Story of Atlantis
[edit]
I
Eva Ibbotson, (born 1925), novelist and children's writer, The Secret of Platform 13
David Icke, (born 1952), conspiracy theorist
Conn Iggulden, (born 1971), novelist and children's writer, The Dangerous Book for Boys
Elizabeth Inchbald, (1753–1821), novelist and playwright
William Ralph Inge, (known as Dean Inge, 1860–1954), writer, theologian and cleric
Thomas Ingelend, (fl. 1560), The Disobedient Child
Jean Ingelow, (1820–1897), poet and novelist
Hammond Innes, (pen name also Ralph Hammond, 1919–1998), novelist and children's writer
David Irving, (born 1938), writer on history and Holocaust denier
Nathaniel Isaacs, (1808–1872), traveller and writer
Christopher Isherwood, (1904–1986), novelist, Goodbye to Berlin
Kazuo Ishiguro, (b. 1954), novelist, An Artist of the Floating World
George Cecil Ives, (1867–1950), poet and diarist
Helen Ivory, (born 1969), poet
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