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Graham Greene (writer)





Henry Graham Greene, OM ( October 2 , 1904April 3 , 1991 ) was a prolific English Novelist , Playwright , Short Story writer and Critic whose works explore the ambiguities of modern man and ambivalent moral or political issues in a contemporary setting. Although Greene objected strongly to being described as a mere "Catholic novelist", his religion informs most of his novels, and many of his best works (e.g. '' Brighton Rock '', '' The Heart Of The Matter '' and '' The Power And The Glory '') are explicitly Roman Catholic in content and preoccupations.


LIFE AND WORK


Childhood

Greene was born in Berkhamsted , Hertfordshire , the fourth of six children – his younger brother Hugh was later to become the Director-General Of The BBC , and older brother Raymond was an eminent doctor and mountaineer. Their parents, Charles Henry Greene and Marion nee Raymond, were first cousins and members of a large and influential family which included the owners of the Greene King brewery, and various bankers and businessmen. Charles Greene was "second master" at Berkhamsted School , where the headmaster was Dr Thomas Fry (who was married to another cousin of Charles).

In 1910, Charles Greene succeeded Dr Fry as headmaster of the school, and Graham attended the school as a pupil. Bullied and profoundly unhappy as a boarder, Greene made several attempts at Suicide (some of them, Greene claimed, by playing Russian Roulette - though Michael Shelden's biography of Greene discredits the truth of these incidents), and in 1921 at the age of seventeen he underwent six months of Psychoanalysis in London to deal with Depression . After this he returned to the school as a day boy, living with his family. Schoolfriends included Claud Cockburn and Peter Quennell .

He went to Balliol College, Oxford , and his first work (a volume of poetry) was published in 1925, while he was an undergraduate, but it was not widely praised.


Early career

After graduation, Greene took up a career in Journalism , firstly in Nottingham (a city which recurs in his novels as an epitome of mean provincial life), and then as a subeditor on '' The Times ''. While in Nottingham he started a correspondence with Vivien Dayrell-Browning , a Roman Catholic who had written to correct him on a point of Catholic doctrine. Greene converted to the faith in 1926, and the couple were married the following year. They had two children, Lucy (born 1933) and Francis (born 1936; died 1987). In 1948 Greene left Vivien for Catherine Walston, but they remained married.


Novels and other works

Greene's first published novel was '' The Man Within '' in 1929, and its reception emboldened him to give up his job at ''The Times'' and work full-time as a novelist. However, the following two books were not successful (Greene disowned them in later life), and his first real success was '' Stamboul Train '' in 1932 – as with several of his subsequent books, this was also adapted as a film (''Orient Express'', 1934).

His income from novels was supplemented by freelance journalism, including book and film reviews for '' The Spectator '', and co-editing the magazine '' Night And Day '', which closed down in 1937 shortly after Greene's review of the film ''Wee Willie Winkie'', starring a nine-year-old Shirley Temple , caused the magazine to lose a Libel case. Greene's review claimed that Temple displayed "a certain adroit coquetry which appealed to middle-aged men", and is now seen as one of the first criticisms of the sexualisation of young children by the entertainment industry.

His fiction was originally divided into two '', that he himself cast as "entertainments" but which often included a notable philosophical edge, and literary works such as '' The Power And The Glory '', on which his reputation was thought to be based.

As his career lengthened, however, Greene and his readers both found the "entertainments" to be of nearly as high a value as the literary efforts, and Greene's later efforts such as '' The Human Factor '', '' The Comedians '', '' Our Man In Havana '' and '' The Quiet American '', combine these modes into works of remarkable insight and compression.


Writing style

Greene's Novel s are written in a contemporary, realistic style, often featuring characters troubled by self-doubt and living in seedy or rootless circumstances. The doubts were often of a religious nature, echoing the author's ambiguous attitude to Catholicism (by the end of his life he seems to have lost his faith, but still considered himself a Catholic). He converted at a young age in order to marry his first love. He was known to have had several affairs, from long-lasting to casual ones. He struggled mightily with basic tenets of Catholicism, and while not abandoning it, obviously questioned it profoundly, as many of his characters do.

Unlike other "Catholic writers" such as Evelyn Waugh and Anthony Burgess , Greene's politics were essentially left-leaning, though some biographers believe politics mattered little to him. In his later years he was a strong critic of what he saw as American imperialism, and he supported the Cuban leader Fidel Castro , whom he had met. {Link without Title}


Travel

Throughout his life, Greene was obsessed with travelling far from his native England, to what he called the "wild and remote" places of the world. His travels provided him with opportunities to engage in Espionage on behalf of the United Kingdom (in Sierra Leone during the Second World War , for example). Greene had been recruited to MI6 by the notorious Double Agent Kim Philby . He reworked the colourful and exciting characters and places he encountered into the fabric of his novels. A 1938 trip to Mexico to see the effects of a campaign of forced anti-Catholic Secularisation was funded by the Roman Catholic Church . This resulted in the factual ''The Lawless Roads'' (published in America as ''Another Mexico''), and the fictional '' The Power And The Glory ''. The novel was condemned by the Vatican in 1953.

Many of his books have been filmed, most notably 1947's '' Brighton Rock '', and he also wrote several original Screenplay s, most famously for the film '' The Third Man ''.


Trivia

Greene greatly enjoyed parody. In 1949, when the '' New Statesman '' publication held a contest for parodies of Greene's distinctive writing style, he submitted an entry under a pseudonym and won second prize. The resulting work, ''The Stranger's Hand'', was later finished by another writer and brought to the screen by Italian film director, Mario Soldati. In 1965, Greene entered a similar ''New Statesman'' parody contest, again under a pseudonym, and won an honorable mention.

Greene's short story " The Destructors " was featured in the movie Donnie Darko .


Final years

Greene moved to was convicted of several counts of corruption and associated crimes and sentenced to prison. In the last years of his life, Greene lived in the small resort city of Vevey , on Lake Geneva in Switzerland . On his death at the age of 86 in 1991, he was interred in the nearby cemetery in Corsier-sur-Vevey .

October 2004 saw the publication of the third and final volume of ''The Life of Graham Greene'' by Norman Sherry , Greene's official biographer. The writing of this biography created a story in itself in that Sherry followed in Greene's footsteps, even coming down with diseases that Greene had come down with in the same place. Sherry's work reveals that Greene continued to submit reports to British intelligence until the end of his life. This has led scholars and Greene's reading public to entertain the provocative question, "Was Greene a novelist who was also a spy, or was his lifelong literary career the perfect cover?"


BIBLIOGRAPHY


Verse



Novels



Autobiography



Travel books



Plays



Screenplays



Short stories (selected)


:" The Second Death " (1929)
:" Proof Positive " (1930)
:" I Spy " (1930)
:" A Day Saved " (1935)
:" Jubilee " (1936)
:" Brother " (1936)
:" A Chance For Mr Lever " (1936)
:" The Basement Room " (1936) (aka " The Fallen Idol ", later turned into a film directed by Carol Reed )
:" The Innocent " (1937)
:" A Drive In The Country " (1937)
:" Across The Bridge " (1938)
:" A Little Place Off The Edgeware Road " (1939)
:" The Case For The Defence " (1939)
:" Alas, Poor Maling " (1940)
:" Men At Work " (1940)
:" Greek Meets Greek " (1941)
:" The Hint Of An Explanation " (1948)
:" The Blue Film " (1954)
:" Special Duties " (1954)
:" The Destructors " (1954)

:" A Visit To Morin "
:" Dream Of A Strange Land "
:" A Discovery In The Woods "
:" Church Militant " (1956)
:" Dear Dr Falkenheim " (1963)
:" The Blessing " (1966)

:" Beauty "
:" Chagrin In Three Parts "
:" The Over-night Bag "
:" Mortmain "
:" Cheap In August "
:" A Shocking Accident "
:" The Invisible Japanese Gentlemen "
:" Awful When You Think Of It "
:" Doctor Crombie "
:" The Root Of All Evil "
:" Two Gentle People "

:" The News In English "
:" The Moment Of Truth "
:" The Man Who Stole The Eiffel Tower "
:" The Lieutenant Died Last "
:" A Branch Of The Service "
:" An Old Man's Memory "
:" The Lottery Ticket "
:" The New House "
:" Work Not In Progress "
:" Murder For The Wrong Reason "
:" An Appointment With The General "


Children's books

  • ''The Little Fire Engine'' (n.d., illus. Dorothy Craigie ; 1973, illus. Edward Ardizzone )

  • ''The Little Horse Bus'' (1966, illus. Dorothy Craigie)

  • ''The Little Steamroller'' (1963, illus. Dorothy Craigie)

  • ''The Little Train'' (1957, illus. Dorothy Craigie; 1973, illus. Edward Ardizzone)



Other

  • ''An impossible woman: The memories of Dottoressa Moor of Capri'' (ed. Greene, 1975)

  • Introduction to ''My Silent War'', by Kim Philby , 1968, British Intelligence Double Agent , mole for Soviets

  • ''J'Accuse - The Dark Side of Nice'' (1982)

  • ''Lord Rochester's monkey: Being the life of John Wilmot, Second Earl of Rochester'' (1974)

  • ''The Pleasure-Dome: The Collected Film Criticism, 1935–40'' (ed. John Russell Taylor, 1980)

  • ''The Old School: Essays by Divers Hands'' (ed. Greene, 1974)

  • ''Yours, etc.: Letters to the Press'' (1989)

  • ''Why the Epigraph?'' (1989)



FURTHER READING

  • Kelly, Richard Michael , ''Graham Greene'', Ungar, 1984

  • Kelly, Richard Michael , ''Graham Greene: A Study of the Short Fiction''. Twayne, 1992.

  • Duran, Leopoldo , ''Graham Greene: Friend and Brother'', translated by Euan Cameron, HarperCollins

  • Shelden, Michael , ''Graham Greene: The Enemy Within'', (pub. William Heinemann, 1994), Random House ed. 1995: ISBN 0679428836

  • Sherry, Norman (1989-2004), ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 1 1904-1939'', (pub. Random House UK, 1989, ISBN 0224026542), Viking ed. 1989: ISBN 0670813761, Penguin reprint 2004: ISBN 0142004200

  • Sherry, Norman , ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 2 1939-1955'', (pub. Viking 1994: ISBN 0670860565), Penguin reprint 2004: ISBN 0142004219

  • Sherry, Norman , ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 3 1955-1991'', (pub. Viking 2004, ISBN 0670031429)



EXTERNAL LINKS