Abstract
Daniel Marcus Davin (1913-90) grew up in an Irish immigrant family in Southland. He won a scholarship to the University of Otago, where he excelled in Latin and English. After winning the Rhodes Scholarship for 1936, he attended Balliol in Oxford where he gained a first. At the same time, Davin drafted his first novel, Cliffs of Fall (1945). After the end of WWII, Davin was appointed editor of the Clarendon Press in Oxford, where he gained a reputation for being ‘the greatest academic publisher of his time’. Throughout his life, he continued to write. Not Here, Not Now is set at the University of Otago.
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