W. Somerset Maugham has written at least 149 books. Their most popular book is Of Human Bondage with 180 saves with an average rating of 4.21⭐.
William Somerset Maugham was born at the British Embassy in Paris, France, where his father was an English lawyer handling the legal affairs of the British embassy. His mother died of tuberculosis while he was young, a death which traumatized him for life. Two years later, his father died of cancer, and he was sent to England to be cared for by his uncle, Henry MacDonald Maugham, the Vicar of Whitstable, in Kent. His uncle was cold and cruel, and the boarding school he attended, The King's School in Canterbury, was also miserable for him. At sixteen, he refused to continue at The King's School and he was allowed to travel to Germany, where he studied literature, philosophy and German at Heidelberg University. In Germany, he wrote his first book, a biography of opera composer Giacomo Meyerbeer, and he met John Ellingham Brooks, with whom he had an affair.
On his return to England he worked in an accountant's office for a month, then returned to Whitstable. His uncle sent him to King's College London to study medicine, although he had been writing since the age of 20 and intended to become an author. He continued writing nightly, and in 1897, he finished his second book, Liza of Lambeth. It was published in 1897, and it became so popular that Maugham, who by this time had qualified to be a doctor, dropped medicine and began writing full-time. He travelled and wrote, and in 1907 began to experience great success with plays as well as novels. In World War I he served in France as a member of the British Red Cross's "Literary Ambulance Drivers." During the war he met Frederick Gerald Haxton who became his companion and lover until Haxton's death in 1944. In 1915, he became a British agent operating in Switzerland against the Berlin Committee while posing as a writer. In 1916, he and Haxton travelled to the Pacific to research his novel The Moon And Sixpence, based on the life of Paul Gauguin. In May of 1917, he married Syrie Wellcome, with whom he had had a daughter. In June of 1917 he went to Russia for the British Secret Intelligence Service, to counter German pacifist propaganda and keep the provisional government in power, a mission which failed. In 1927-8 he and Syrie divorced. In 1928 he bought Villa Mauresque in Cap Ferrat on the French Riviera, and made it into a great literary and social salon as well as his home. In 1940, as France fell to German occupation, he fled to the United States, first to Hollywood, where he became a screenwriter. He later moved to the South. When Haxton died in 1944, he returned to England, then in 1946 to his villa in France, where he lived until his death. Alan Searle became his companion until his death in 1965.
1915 • 180 Readers • 618 pages • 4.2
1944 • 173 Readers • 314 pages • 4.1
1925 • 74 Readers • 3.6
1919 • 57 Readers • 273 pages • 3.6
1908 • 16 Readers • 244 pages • 3.1
1927 • 14 Readers • 326 pages • 3
1930 • 13 Readers • 308 pages • 4
1915 • 13 Readers • 940 pages • 4.3
1937 • 12 Readers • 292 pages • 3.3
#1 of 1 in Collected Short Stories of W. Somerset Maugham
1900 • 10 Readers • 476 pages • 4
1919 • 9 Readers • 262 pages • 3.6
1941 • 8 Readers • 120 pages • 3
1932 • 7 Readers • 224 pages • 3
1939 • 6 Readers • 314 pages • 3.8
2019 • 6 Readers • 27,629 pages
1921 • 5 Readers • 166 pages • 4
1908 • 3 Readers • 192 pages
1900 • 3 Readers • 186 pages • 3
1902 • 3 Readers • 4
1925 • 3 Readers • 237 pages • 3.5
1938 • 3 Readers • 305 pages • 5
1921 • 2 Readers • 198 pages
1926 • 2 Readers • 91 pages • 3.5
1902 • 2 Readers • 256 pages
1937 • 2 Readers • 275 pages
1925 • 2 Readers • 234 pages • 4
1987 • 2 Readers • 575 pages
2014 • 2 Readers
1904 • 2 Readers • 398 pages • 4
1952 • 2 Readers • 441 pages • 5
2007 • 2 Readers • 512 pages • 2
1940 • 2 Readers • 169 pages • 4
2012 • 2 Readers • 221 pages
1944 • 2 Readers • 336 pages • 5
1921 • 2 Readers • 62 pages
1921 • 1 Reader • 126 pages
2012 • 1 Reader • 184 pages • 2
#3 of 3 in The Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories
1966 • 1 Reader • 224 pages
1 Reader
2007 • 1 Reader • 164 pages
1921 • 1 Reader • 92 pages
1939 • 1 Reader
1937 • 1 Reader • 236 pages • 4
1925 • 1 Reader • 293 pages
1915 • 1 Reader • 704 pages
2017 • 1 Reader • 13,166 pages
1944 • 1 Reader • 409 pages
1924 • 1 Reader • 28 pages • 5
1897 • 1 Reader • 3
1 Reader
1940 • 1 Reader • 107 pages
1962 • 1 Reader • 128 pages
2001 • 1 Reader • 339 pages
1958 • 1 Reader • 233 pages
1974 • 1 Reader • 198 pages
1926 • 1 Reader • 70 pages
1908 • 1 Reader • 414 pages • 4
1948 • 1 Reader • 253 pages • 3
1905 • 1 Reader • 486 pages • 4
1915 • 1 Reader • 478 pages • 4
1 Reader • 479 pages • 4
1967 • 1 Reader • 383 pages • 3
1921 • 1 Reader • 955 pages
1941 • 1 Reader
1927 • 1 Reader • 320 pages
1954 • 1 Reader • 688 pages
1927 • 1 Reader • 277 pages
1 Reader • 5
1951 • 1 Reader • 448 pages
1998 • 1 Reader • 528 pages • 4
1927 • 1 Reader
1962 • 1 Reader • 474 pages
1930 • 1 Reader • 272 pages
1925 • 1 Reader • 228 pages
1955 • 1 Reader • 463 pages
1921 • 1 Reader • 277 pages
1941 • 1 Reader • 132 pages • 4
1927 • 1 Reader
1 Reader • 207 pages • 2
1925 • 1 Reader • 352 pages • 4
1919 • 1 Reader
1939 • 1 Reader • 256 pages
1919 • 1 Reader • 248 pages • 5
2009 • 1 Reader • 624 pages
2015 • 1 Reader • 253 pages
1921 • 1 Reader • 839 pages
1930 • 1 Reader • 203 pages • 2
2012 • 1 Reader
1927 • 1 Reader
1 Reader
1922 • 1 Reader
1915 • 1 Reader • 688 pages
1 Reader • 4
1937 • 1 Reader
1 Reader
1 Reader
1919 • 1 Reader • 288 pages • 5
1 Reader
1 Reader
1 Reader