Henry Major Tomlinson (21 June 1873 – 5 February 1958) was a British writer and journalist.
He worked as a shipping clerk, and then as a reporter for the Morning Leader newspaper; he travelled up the Amazon River for it.
He left the paper in 1923 when Massingham resigned because of a change of owner and political line.
How they build and cumulate, how the sentences shift, turn and move in delicate loops and ridges under the blowing wind of thought, like the sand of the dunes that he describes in one essay.
[3] Frederic P. Mayer, however, writing in the Virginia Quarterly Review, expressed a less admiring view:[4] Because his book is labeled fiction, H. M. Tomlinson, with the publication of his first novel, "Gallions Reach," is gaining fame.