Francis Hackett was born in Kilkenny, Ireland in 1883 to the daughter of a farmer and a medical officer. He is most famous for writing a detailed book about Henry VIII but was also a noted critic and published several other books most of which were either non-fiction or biographies.
He was educated in St Kieran's College, where Thomas MacDonagh was his teacher.
He married the Danish writer Signe Toksvig, and the couple lived in Ireland in the early years of the State, and then moved to Denmark, to the US during World War II, and back to Denmark.
"Hackett immigrated to the United States in 1901 for various reasons, among them being his dissatisfaction with the British Government ruling Ireland, and his family’s inability to finance his college education. When he arrived in New York he published articles in Standish O’Grady’s All Ireland Review, Arthur Griffith’s United Irishman, and Samuel Richardson’s The Gael. Hackett took a series of jobs as a clerk in a law firm, for the advertising department of Cosmopolitan Magazine, and literary editor of various periodicals, such as the Chicago Evening Post. In 1906 Hackett moved into Hull-House and taught English to Russian Immigrants. As writer and critic, Hackett attacked Chicago’s genteel and commercial cultures, racism, and the subordination of women. He left his position as literary editor of the Post in 1911 to pursue a career as a novelist." (http://tigger.uic.edu/depts/hist/hull-maxwell/vicinity/nws1/documents/hackett-introduction.PDF)
Hackett died in 1962.
Some of his books include:
PERSONAL HISTORY OF HENRY THE EIGHTH; London, Jonathan Cape. 1929
FRANCIS THE FIRST;
Queen Anne Boleyn: A Novel;
The Green Lion;
Horizons: A Book Of Criticism;
American Rainbow: Early Reminiscences
I Chose Denmark (Doubleday Doran & Co, New York, 1940)
The Story of the Irish Nation
That Nice Young Couple
The Invisible Censor
Ireland: A Study in Nationalism
What MEIN KAMPF means to AMERICA (Reynal & Hitchcock, New York, 1941)