This looks like a great one I'm going to have to put on the list to look out for at the library. I love Brideshead Revisited and Evelyn Waugh and anything about Oxford so how perfect is this?
Mad World: Evelyn Waugh and the Secrets of Brideshead
Evelyn Waugh was already famous when Brideshead Revisited was published in 1945. Written at the height of the war, the novel was, he admitted, of no 'immediate propaganda value'. Instead, it was the story of a household, a family and a journey of religious faith -- an elegy for a vanishing world and a testimony to a family he had fallen in love with a decade earlier. The Lygons of Madresfield were every bit as glamorous, eccentric and compelling as their counterparts, the Marchmains, in Brideshead Revisited. William Lygon, Earl Beauchamp, was a warm-hearted, generous and unconventional father whose seven children adored him. When he was forced to flee the country by his scheming brother-in-law, his traumatised children stood firmly by him, defying not only the mores of the day, but also their deeply religious mother.
In this engrossing biography, bestselling author Paula Byrne takes an innovative approach to her subject, setting out to capture Waugh through the friendships and loves that mattered most to him. She uncovers a man who, far from the snobbish misanthropist of popular caricature, was as loving and complex as the family that inspired him. This brilliantly original biography unlocks for the first time the extent to which Waugh's great novel encoded and transformed his own experiences. In so doing, it illuminates the loves and obsessions that shaped his life, and brings us inevitably to a secret that dared not speak its name.


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Oooh, this looks good. Waugh was such a complicated person--his biography is sure to be a juicy read. And I love anything with the word "Secrets" in the title.
ReplyDeleteGreat find. I haven't read Brideshead Revisited, but it looks like I should! My find is at The Crowded Leaf.
ReplyDeleteI've been wanting to read Brideshead Revisted for awhile now. Sounds like this biography is a great companion book.
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