New Fame New Love

New Fame New Love

by Bevis Hillier (Author)

Synopsis

This volume deals with Betjeman's zenith years. Now he wins fame not just for his poems but as a tastemaker opening eyes to the Victorian ages, as a battling conservationist and as a television personality, one of the Old Masters of a new medium. The book opens with the Betjemans' stormy married life (their German maid thought John's first name was Shutup). There are chapters on Betjeman as film critic for the Evening Standard ('Do you mind if I say you like English Perpendicular?', he asked Myrna Loy) and as editor of the Shell Guides with John Piper, whose wife Myfanwy - Goldilegs to Betjeman - became one of his enduring muses. When war came he was posted to neutral Ireland as a diplomat - some thought, a spy. An IRA officer was sent to shoot him; luckily Betjeman was on leave at the time. Betjeman's loves and longings are described, as well as the beginning of his close and enduring friendship with Lady Elizabeth Cavendish. The inspirations of favourite poems are discovered.His love of Metroland, or remote churches, dim peers and obscure clergyman poets, his antipathy to business bishops and to Pevsner, the Herr Professor Doktor, together with an enormous range of his friends, including Nancy Mitford, Osbert Lancaster and James Lees-Milne. Here too are his hitherto unpublished diary entries about W.H. Auden, his skirmishes with Evelyn Waugh over religion and his anguish when his wife became a Roman Catholic. The narrative is crowned by the huge success of his Collected Poems in 1958, a really thrilling moment of triumph.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 480
Edition: First edition
Publisher: John Murray
Published: 07 Nov 2002

ISBN 10: 0719550025
ISBN 13: 9780719550027

Media Reviews
One of the richest and most entertaining biographies of recent times. John Bayley. -- Literary Review It is a book to read slowly for fear of coming too fast to the end. -- Guardian The book is crammed with very funny stories. -- Daily Telegraph
Author Bio
Bevis Hillier has dedicated more than twenty-five years to writing Betjeman's life, a task entrusted to him by the poet himself. Patrick Taylor-Martin wrote: 'It is impossible to imagine the job done by anyone more intelligent, industrious or sympathetic.' Like Betjeman he was at Magdalen College, Oxford; later he joined The Times, became Editor of The Connoisseur, and a columnist on the Los Angeles Times, as well as writing for many other papers and journals. He is an authority on nineteenth-century ceramics and on Art Deco. He edited Betjeman's Uncollected Poems (now included in Collected Poems), compiled John Betjeman: A Life in Pictures ('a heavenly book', A. L. Rowse) and is the author of Young Betjeman. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and of the Royal Society of Literature. He lives in Hampshire. Young Betjeman has been reissued as a companion to this new volume.