
George Warwick Deeping (28 May 1877 – 20 April 1950) was a prolific English novelist and short story writer, whose most famous novel was Sorrell and Son (1925). Born in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, into a family of doctors, he was educated at Merchant Taylors' School. He proceeded to Trinity College, Cambridge to study medicine and science, and then to Middlesex Hospital to finish his medical training.[1] During the First World War, he served in the Royal Army Medical Corps. Deeping later gave up his job as a doctor to become a full-time writer. His early work is dominated by historical romances. His later novels can be seen as attempts at keeping alive the spirit of the Edwardian age. He was one of the best selling authors of the 1920s and 1930s, with seven of his novels making the best-seller list.[2] George Orwell was a strong critic of Deeping's, criticising his melodramatic plots. Deeping also published fiction in several US magazines, including the Saturday Evening Post and Adventure.[3] He married Phyllis Maude Merrill and lived up to his death in Eastlands on Brooklands Road in Weybridge, Surrey.
Books

A Woman's War
1907
Doomsday
1927

Laughing House
1946

Love Among the Ruins
1904

Uther and Igraine
1903

No Hero This
1936

Roper's Row
1929

The Woman at the Door
1937

The Times’ Red Cross Story Book By Famous Novelists Serving In His Majesty's Forces
1915

Old Wine and New
1932

The House of Spies
1938

The Rust of Rome
1910

Sorrell and Son
1928