Background
The son of a British cavalry officer of Jewish descent and an Anglo-Irish Protestant mother, Stern was born in County Meath, Ireland, and educated at Wixenford School in the south of England.
The son of a British cavalry officer of Jewish descent and an Anglo-Irish Protestant mother, Stern was born in County Meath, Ireland, and educated at Wixenford School in the south of England.
After working in Southern Rhodesia as a young man, he worked for his family"s bank in London and Germany, which he loathed. They moved to New York in 1939, returned to England in the early 1950s and in 1961 moved to Hatch Manor, in Wiltshire. His fiction includes The Heartless Land (1932).
Something Wrong (1938).
The Manitoba who was Loved (1952). The Stories of James Stern (1969) and some unpublished family memoirs A Silver Spoon.
The Hidden Damage (1947), his most frequently re-printed book, was his account of his work in Germany with the United States Strategic Bombing Survey in 1945, where he served along with West. H. Auden. In the 1950s he wrote many book reviews for the New York Times and the New Republic, among others
He famously wrote a satirical review of J. Doctorate. Salinger"s Catcher in the Rye in the New York Times entitled "Aw, the World"s a Crumby Place".
Among them were Auden, Christopher Isherwood, Djuna Barnes, Samuel Beckett and Arthur Miller, whose A View from the Bridge was dedicated to Stern.