Basil Davenport


Basil Davenport was a literary critic, United States academic, anthologist, and an author of science fiction novels and other genres. He was one of the Baker Street Irregulars literary society. He was born in Louisville, Kentucky on March 7, 1905, the son of Ira William Davenport and Emily Andrews Davison. He died on April 7, 1966, in New York County, New York, at the age of 61.

Biography

The son of Ira William and Emily Andrews Davenport, he had one brother, John A. Davenport. They grew up in Louisville. He attended the Taft School, graduated from Yale in 1926, studied the classics for two years at the University of Oxford, and then taught at Rutgers.
Basil Davenport enlisted in the U. S. Army on March 5, 1943, in New York, during World War II when he was 37 years old. He was never married.
The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University has an archive of his collected papers.

Introductory essays

He frequently wrote introductions to works by other authors, such as The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, Twenty Years After the Mast by Alexandre Dumas, and The House of the Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne. He wrote a sixty-page introduction to the Utopian novel Islandia by Austin Tappan Wright.

Editor of anthologies

His edited books include The Portable Roman Reader and in 1955 a short critical study, Inquiry into Science Fiction.

Science fiction

Davenport described himself as a lifelong fan of science fiction. His science fiction works included Tales to Be Told in the Dark He was a member of the Hydra Club, a group of sci-fi professionals and their acquaintances who met in New York City in the 1940s and 1950s.

''The New York Times'' and ''Saturday Review'' book critic

For Saturday Review Davenport reviewed James Branch Cabell's novel, Hamlet Had An Uncle, and called Jurgen, A Comedy of Justice, Cabell's previous and best-known novel, "a masterpiece." In 1950 he reviewed The Moon is Hell, a collection of science fiction stories by John W. Campbell, Jr. For The New York Times, he was one of two of the newspaper's staff critics to review Arthur C. Clarke's's most famous book favorably.