- Dorothy Cheston bore his out-of-wedlock child. (1926)
- He went to London originally to be a solicitor's clerk. After winning a literary competition, he became a full-time writer. He wrote short stories, novels, hit plays, and screenplays.
- During his lifetime, his books sold in huge numbers, and he was a figure of great influence in politics and culture. He declined a knighthood for his service running the French propaganda department for the British government during WWI.
- The Savoy Hotel in London still serves an omelet named after him; it features smoked haddock and Parmesan cheese.
- Close friend of H.G. Wells.
- His father was a pawnbroker.
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