Kiss Me Chudleigh

Kiss Me Chudleigh

by WilliamCook (Author)

Synopsis

Auberon Waugh has been compared to Jonathan Swift. He was an outrageous satirist who slaughtered whole herds of sacred cows and turned people's heartfelt convictions on their heads. The best of his writing, collected here, is as timeless as Gulliver's Travels and has much power to outrage as the day it was written. Auberon Waugh is a master of the art of going too far, but above all, he was very funny. Kiss Me, Chudleigh is a collection of Waugh's best writing. It is also a compact biography. It will consist of excerpts from the things he wrote, drawn from every stage of his career, from the Catholic Herald to Private Eye, the Spectator, the Daily Telegraph and the Literary Review. Arranged both chronologically and thematically, marrying his main preoccupations with the main phases of his life: school (where he received a record number of beatings); university (he came down from Oxford after one year, without a degree); Fleet Street (where he cut his teeth writing captions for the Sunday Mirror's bathing beauties); France (where he lived while writing his second novel, and returned regularly throughout his life); the House of Commons (where he won his spurs as a political correspondent); Grub Street (where he found his comic voice, writing for Private Eye); Somerset (where he made his home) and Abroad (from war reporting in Biafra to travel writing in Bangkok).

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Publisher: Coronet
Published: 14 Oct 2010

ISBN 10: 1444711490
ISBN 13: 9781444711493

Media Reviews
Auberon Waugh ... was the most controversial, the most abusive, perhaps the most brilliant journalist of his age - an acerbic wit, a traveller, a farceur, an epicure; above all, a hater of humbug in all its forms and of politicians in most of theirs. -- The Telegraph 20010118 A master of the surreal -- Craig Brown 20010118 The Dean Swift of his day -- AN Wilson 20010118 An ideological trailblazer -- Boris Johnson 20010118 The greatest journalist of his generation -- Geoffrey Wheatcroft 20010118 Wickedly funny, but sometimes just wicked -- Lynn Barber 20010118 A most unpleasant man -- Tony Benn 20010118
Author Bio
William Cook is the author of Tragically I Was An Only Twin (Century), Ha Bloody Ha - Comedians Talking (Fourth Estate) and The Comedy Store - The Club That Changed British Comedy (Little, Brown). He has worked for the BBC and written for the Guardian, the Mail on Sunday and the New Statesman.