Harry Summerfield Hoff (4 August 1910 – 5 September 2002) was an English novelist, writing under the name William Cooper.

Life

H. S. Hoff (William Cooper) was born in Crewe, the son of elementary school teachers, and attended Crewe County Secondary School before reading natural sciences at Christ's College, Cambridge. After graduating in 1933 he was a teacher at Alderman Newton's School in Leicester, an experience on which he seems to have drawn for his novel Scenes from Provincial Life. Hoff served in the Signals Branch of the Royal Air Force in World War II, and later became a civil servant, associating closely with C. P. Snow, who appears in light disguise as Robert in Scenes from Provincial Life and its sequels. Amongst his appointments he worked for the UK Atomic Energy Authority and the Crown Agents. After retiring he held an academic position with Syracuse University, New York, lecturing on English literature to its students in London.

Hoff wrote four novels between 1934 and 1946 under his own name but made his reputation with his first novel under the pen name William Cooper (used from then on), Scenes from Provincial Life (1950), the first of five more or less autobiographical novels published over the ensuing half-century. It was hailed at once by writers such as Kingsley Amis, Anthony Burgess and John Braine, Deceptively simple in style and both comic and lyrical in tone, the novel tells of events in the lives of its narrator, Joe Lunn, a grammar school physics teacher; his girlfriend Myrtle, who wants him to marry her; his friend Tom, with whom he plans to emigrate to the USA; and various other characters in an English provincial town in the spring and summer of 1939. The novel's naturalism was a conscious rejection of the earlier modernist tradition of the English novel, which Hoff called the "Art Novel". Malcolm Bradbury wrote of it that "a good part of the literary styles and temper of the 1950s was set by this book." BBC Radio 4 broadcast a version of Scenes from Provincial Life in the 1970s, and in 2003 broadcast a four-part dramatisation by Eric Pringle, with David Thorpe as Joe and Alison Pettitt as Myrtle. Malcolm Bradbury wrote a script for a TV dramatisation of Scenes from Provincial Life and Scenes from Metropolitan Life in six 55-minute episodes, which was never produced.

Awards and honours

  • 1996 Golden PEN Award

References

  • William Cooper Papers and William Cooper Collection at the Harry Ransom Center
  • Obituary in The Telegraph
  • Obituary in The Guardian
  • Obituary in The Independent
  • "William Cooper", Fellows Remembered, The Royal Society of Literature