Chesterton attended St. Paul’s School for this early studies then attended the Slade School of Art to take classes in illustrating and literature, neither of which he completed his degrees for. His first job as a writer came in 1896 working for the London publisher Redway, where he would continue to work until 1902. The Daily News would offer him a weekly column in 1902 and in 1905 The Illustrated London News would also give him a weekly column. Outside of his job Chesterton would do freelance journalistic work being an art and literature critic. Chesterton always had an interest in art since he was young and had planned to become an artist, but kept to writing his whole life. Even though becoming an artist never worked out for hm he was able to create brilliant career for him self as a highly respected writer. Throughout his career he wrote eighty books, hundreds of poems, two hundred short stories, four thousand essays, and several plays. His two most famous works, were the …show more content…
He also created a popular fictional character named Father Brown. Father Brown was a witty detective like Sherlock Holmes, who would solve crimes through his knowledge on how nature works and later would go back to his priestly duties. Since most of his nonfiction work included a lot of opinionated writings that not everyone agreed with, his most widely praised nonfiction work was Charles Dickens: A Critical Study. If all the literary achievements weren’t enough Chesterton also became a popular speaker on radio in the last years of his life. It started when BBC invited him to start giving a series of radio talks. He was unsure about doing it at first, but eventually began giving forty talks a year. His funny and creative personality allowed him to go on radio with little to no script and improvise. Clearly Chesterton never hesitated to used his creative and brilliant mind to on a new art form to excel in, whether it be writing, debating, giving radio talks, or critiquing others art. Chesterton even said he played a cowboy in a silent film that was never publicly released. Gilbert Keith Chesterton died on June 14th, 1936 from congestive heart failure. There is