John Middleton Murry (born August 6, 1889, London, England—died March 13, 1957, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk) was an English journalist and critic whose romantic and biographical approach to literature ran counter to the leading critical tendencies of his day. He wrote at least 40 books and a large body of journalistic works in which his pronounced—though changeable—views on social, political, and religious questions were constantly before the public.
Murry was the husband of short-story writer Katherine Mansfield and a close associate of D.H. Lawrence, both of whom influenced his development as a writer. During World War I the Murrys and the Lawrences were neighbours in Cornwall, and something of the relationship between the two couples appears in Lawrence’s Women in Love. Murry also appears, harshly lampooned, as the character Burlap in Aldous Huxley’s Point Counter Point.
Murry began his career as editor of Rhythm while at Brasenose College, Oxford. He was editor of Athenaeum (1919–21) and founding editor of Adelphi (1923–48), both literary magazines. Among his numerous critical works are studies of Mansfield (Katherine Mansfield and Other Literary Portraits, 1949) and Lawrence (Son of Woman, the Story of D.H. Lawrence, 1931), as well as several works on Keats. Murry’s autobiography, Between Two Worlds (1935), is strikingly revealing about his own life. A large selection of his letters to Mansfield, edited by C.A. Hankin, was published in 1983. Murry’s son, John Middleton Murry (1926–2002), was a noted novelist, writing science fiction under the name Richard Cowper; he also wrote general fiction as Colin Middleton Murry.