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David Holbrook

David Holbrook (born 1923) is a British writer, poet and academic. Since 1989 he has been Emeritus Fellow of Downing College, Cambridge.


Contents

Life

David K. Holbrook was born in Norwich in 1923. He studied English at Downing College, Cambridge for a year in 1941, where he was a pupil of F. R. Leavis, before joining the British Army. He is sometimes identified as a Leavis disciple, but their relationship was slighter than this might suggest (and also ended angrily, though this is a lesser indication). His novel Flesh Wounds (1966) is a lightly-fictionalised account of his D-Day campaign experiences with the East Riding of Yorkshire Yeomanry.

In 1945 he returned to Downing to complete his degree, which he did in 1947. In 1946 he made a bleak visit to George Orwell on Jura. The actual reason was to see his girlfriend Susan Watson, who was Orwell's housekeeper, but Orwell assumed it was connected with Holbrook's membership of the Communist Party of Great Britain, and gave him a frosty reception.

After Cambridge he became editor, initially with Edgell Rickword, of the communist cultural periodical Our Time. He then took up teaching positions, for the Workers' Educational Association and then at a secondary school in Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire. He became a full-time writer in the early 1960s. He also renewed links with the University of Cambridge, becoming a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge in 1961.

The Associated University Presses marked his seventieth birthday by publishing a 'festschrift' entitled Powers of Being in October 1995. The book of essays is edited by Edwin Webb, Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Greenwich, and held contributions by sixteen academics and teachers from the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States, including a portrait written by Boris Ford. In over thirty years his range of publications has been prodigious: from `English for Maturity' (1961), his first book on teaching English, to `Creativity and Popular Culture' (1994), he has written on literature, culture and education, as well as producing his poetry and his novels. His distinguished literary achievements are here suitably celebrated.

He is a Fellow of the English Association.

Works

Novels

Holbrook wrote several novels based on his own life and his family history. These were not romans à clef—most characters were identified by their real names—but they were closely based on real events without the constraints of veracity. The novels were not written in the internal chronological order.

His first novel (Flesh Wounds (1966)) told the story of the escapades of Paul Grimmer (Holbrook's fictionalised persona) as a tank officer in the Normandy invasions. The events of Grimmer's adolescent life up to his enlistment were recounted in A Play of Passion (1978), which told of his involvement with the Maddermarket Theatre and its founder Nugent Monck.

In Going Off The Rails (2003), Holbrook recreates the Edwardian lives of his paternal grandparents in rural Norfolk. His grandfather William built wagons in the Midland and Great Northern Railway workshops at Melton Constable. Holbrook's father worked as a railway booking clerk in North Walsham. He moved to Norwich when he was suspected of theft.

His other novels are Nothing Larger Than Life (1987); Worlds Apart (1988); A Little Athens (1990); Jennifer (1992); The Gold In Father's Heart (1992); Even If They Fail (1994); and Getting It Wrong With Uncle Tom (1998).

Poetry

Imaginings. (details unknown)Against The Cruel Frost. (details unknown)Object Relations. (details unknown)Old World New World. London: Rapp & Whiting, 1969. ISBN 0-85391-144-4

Criticism

The Quest for Love, 1965;Human Hope and the Death Instinct, 1971;Sex and Dehumanization, 1972;The Masks of Hate, 1972;Dylan Thomas;the Code of Night, 1972;Gustav Mahler and the Courage to Be, 1975;Sylvia Plath: Poetry and Existence, 1977;Lost Bearings in English Poetry, 1977;Evolution and the Humanities, 1987;The Novel and Authenticity, 1987;Further Studies in Philosophical Anthropology, 1988;Images of Woman in Literature, 1990;The Skeleton in the Wardrobe: the Phantasies of C.S.Lewis, 1991;Edith Wharton and the Unsatisfactory Man, 1991;Where Lawrence Was Wrong About Woman, 1992;Charles Dickens and the Image of Woman, 1993;Creativity and Popular Culture, 1994;Tolstoy, Woman and Death, 1997;Wuthering Heights: A Drama of Being, 1997;George MacDonald and the Phantom Woman, 2000;Lewis Carroll: Nonsense Against Sorrow, 2000;

Education

English for Maturity (1961) is a guide for secondary school English teachers drawing on Holbrook's experience in that role at Bassingbourn.

His other books on education are English for the Rejected (1964); English in Australia Now (1964); The Exploring Word (1967); Children's Writing (1967); The Secret Places (1972); Education, Nihilism and Survival (1974); Education and Philosophical Anthropology (1987); and English for Meaning (1980).

Other works

List of other works

Bibliography

References

Categories


English novelists | English literary critics | English poets | 1923 births | Living people | Alumni of Downing College, Cambridge | Fellows of King's College, Cambridge

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