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Bruce Chatwin
 
 

Bruce Chatwin [Kindle Edition]

Nicholas Shakespeare
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Amazon.co.uk Review

Bruce Chatwin was the golden child of the contemporary English novel; by the time he died of an AIDS-related illness aged 49 in January 1989 he had produced the startlingly original masterpieces that made his name. Chatwin came late to being a published writer; In Patagonia, his instant classic of what can loosely be termed "travel literature", came out in 1977. In the preceding years this precocious, intense figure had been an art specialist at Sotheby's, a journalist with the Sunday Times, an archaeologist and a restless, questing traveller. By the time his novel of studying the Aboriginal dreamtime in Australia, The Songlines, was published, he had gained a worldwide audience.

An obsessive art collector, Chatwin also acquired people as he did fabulous objects. He took both male and female lovers while continuing to remain married to his wife Elizabeth, seemingly the most enduring relationship of his life. It is her cooperation and tenacity which enabled this biography to come about, as well as Nicholas Shakespeare's exhaustive research (the book was eight years in the making), and his countless interviews with friends and acquaintances from all corners of the globe. It is the international span of Chatwin's experiences that make the reader appreciate his desire to know all cultures and disciplines.

There is some excellent, evocative writing here, particularly in Shakespeare's account of Chatwin's last weeks, his disappointment at not winning the Booker Prize for Utz lifting when a friend told him of acclaimed Italian novelist Alberto Moravia's glowing review of the book in a newspaper. In particular, the detailed passage describing Chatwin's awful, miserable death surrounded by friends and family is harrowing yet moving to read. There are a plethora of adjectives used to describe Chatwin; the list generally includes words such as "elusive", "mercurial", and "charismatic". Yet what Nicholas Shakespeare brings across in this immense, excellent life of Chatwin is the complete aloneness of the man, an at times almost impenetrable solitude. He was a flamboyant fabulist, an unparalleled conversationalist, yet, as the Australian poet Les Murray is quoted as saying: "He was lonely and he wanted to be. He had those blue, implacable eyes that said: "I will reject you, I will forget you, because neither you nor any other human being can give me what I want".--Catherine Taylor

Review

"Of my contemporaries he had the most erudite and possibly the most brilliant mind." - Salman Rushdie
"An epic piece of work of immense satisfaction--awe-inspiring." - "The Times"
"A fascinating account of the man behind the myth." - "Guardian"
"Nicholas Shakespeare's biography of Chatwin sweeps aside years of speculation and hearsay and gives us as intimate a picture of this enigmatic author as we can ever hope to have...utterly compelling." - "Mail on Sunday"
"Comprehensively researched, elegantly written, perfectly balanced between the life, the books and the ideas." - "Independent on Sunday"
"Quite simply, one of the most beautifully written, painstakingly researched and cleverly constructed biographies of this decade...original, intelligent and observant." - "Literary Review"

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1145 KB
  • Print Length: 650 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0099289970
  • Publisher: Vintage Digital (30 Sep 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B00413PIJU
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #54,158 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
By margot
Format:Paperback
A few years back I indulged myself in a marathon reading of every Ernest Hemingway biography that came to hand. Not all were top-notch, but a few were so good that I will forever after prefer to read a Hemingway bio to anything by Papa himself.

And so with Nicholas Shakespeare's lovely masterpiece of a biography of Bruce Chatwin. Chatwin's own works are scoured for biographical data, but most of Shakespeare's research involved 8 years of painstaking interviews and worldwide travels to Afghanistan, India, Patagonia, New York and elsewhere. Simply put, this is a more enjoyable book than anything Chatwin himself ever wrote, and maybe it's better than anything Chatwin could write.

The parallels to Hemingway can be expanded. Chatwin's life was more varied and exciting than anything he was able to commit to his tight, crystallised prose. He was a much greater man than the sum of his works, and he's a very very lucky dead author indeed to have had someone like Nicholas Shakespeare take the first crack at a full-length treatment of the Chatwin life.

Again like Hemingway, Chatwin was brilliant, charismatic, generous--and often supercilious, nasty and a downright selfish bastard. He was so dedicated to his craft that he appears never to have felt a pang of guilt over his readiness to sponge off friends and his long-suffering wife. Anyone who thinks he wants Chatwin as a role model will give the idea second thoughts before finishing this marvelous book!

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
The best way to annoy Bruce Chatwin would probably have been, on the basis of this biography, to file his books under the Travel section, or the Gay Author section. Which is ironic, since his bisexuality and wanderlust are two key themes in this immaculately researched and skillfully written biography. Nicholas has been granted access not only to most of Bruce's friends, associates and relations, but also his extensive notebooks, at one time thought to be so scandalous that they were to be held in the Bodleian library away from the public until 2010. This book is a journey in its own right though - Shakespeare travels in the footsteps of Chatwin through Africa, Argentina and Australia, but never lets his subject over take him - this is a well paced and balanced book. Chatwin was never a prolific writer - he wrote marginally less than Jane Austen, and never had a strong reputation as an author until his final years. In an ideal world, this book would be read as a companion to Chatwin's own work. However, whether you have read all, or some, of his writing, I can definitely recommend this book.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
The seven or so years spent researching and writing this book is clearly evident in this thorough, well-written biography. Obviously, the late Bruce Chatwin would make a challenging candidate for any biographer to tackle, but in Nicholas Shakespeare the right choice was made. The admiration Shakespeare has for his subject is paramount, and his enthusiasm is reflected in the lucidly written pages, but without necessarily overdoing it.

But Chatwin was a man who generated almost magical interest in those he came in contact with, and like myself, through reading his work, although he kept himself well out of it. Having read most of the Chatwin ouevre, I found the biography doubled as a reference aid too, as it cleverly described the background work and processes Chatwin was engaged in before he set out to write a particular book.

More importantly, it managed to shed more light on the development of Chatwin's complex character, his unconventional marriage and his secret sexuality. It was also intriguing to read about the struggle and sacrifices he had to make to produce his beguiling art. Shakespeare has managed to unearth everything imaginable: from ideas jotted down by Chatwin himself in his safeguarded moleskin notebooks, to interviewing endless family, friends and acquaintances from all over the world.

The transformation of Chatwin from a Sotheby's high-flyer to a restless writer is the driving force behind the book. It is a joy to read, but the final chapters describing his falling victim to AIDS are ultimately the most fascinating, and are penned with careful dignity. It is still hard to believe that he was only 48 years old, having died only a decade ago. Nevertheless, the weighty 550 pages make a relatively light, but highly absorbing read when his life is injected into them.

For those of you who need yet to discover the real Bruce Chatwin, this biography could be read as a possible starting point. It will give you a thorough insight into one of the most colourful and intriguing literary figures of the late twentieth century. And believe me, after having read it, it will spark your interest to read Bruce Chatwin's own dazzling output of work, which are all very different in their own right.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Must be one of the best biograhies I have ever read
I actually read this book three times because it contained so much well researched material. I knew nothing about this character, other than reading "On Black Hill" and had no... Read more
Published on 23 Mar 2009 by warthog
A superb book about a superb author and a terrible man
This is a masterful biography, penetrating yet never judgemental, complete but not clinical. The inspiration behind Chatwin's brutally clipped prose are laid bare, from Hemingway... Read more
Published on 1 Jun 2007 by L. Owens
Unmasking the mythomane
Chatwin was a compulsive fantasist in his own life, unable to stop himself from using his considerable knowledge as a launchpad for his own inventions. Read more
Published on 31 Jan 2007 by P. Currion
Brilliant Biography of a Monster
I recently purchased this biography of Bruce Chatwin written by Nicholas Shakespeare. I probably did it to confirm my own prejudices (the sneaking suspicion that Chatwin was 'not a... Read more
Published on 18 Aug 2004 by G. Coupe
A Potrait of the Artist as a Not Very Nice Man
Nicholas Shakespeare has written a very impressive biography of an author who was as complex and elusive in his persona as his work is crystalline in its clarity. Read more
Published on 31 Aug 2001
A superb portrayal of a flawed genius
Chatwin's life is ultimately more interesting than any of his works, as if actually reading about how he wrote his books rather than the end-product seems better. Read more
Published on 4 Sep 2000
Poignant, beautifully written pen-portrait
I have just finished this book on holiday in Thailand. Difficult to get into, it is a very carefully researched portrait of someone I had vaguely heard of but was unfamiliar with. Read more
Published on 24 Aug 2000
Brilliant! Un-put-downable!
Have just finished reading Nicholas Shakespeare's fantastic biography on Bruce Chatwin. I'm not usually that interested in biographies, but this one was so well written that I... Read more
Published on 21 Aug 2000 by Alice Mogens
One of the great biographies of all time
The subject justifies the labour as Chatwin is truly interesting.

The range of issues thrown up by his life - fidelity, relationships, sexuality, writing,... Read more

Published on 10 Mar 2000
A fascinating read and remarkable achievement
This biography must be one of the great biographies of all time.

The subject justifies the labour as Chatwin is truly interesting. Read more

Published on 10 Mar 2000
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Popular Highlights

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He sought in his prose the abstraction he admired in Sung dynasty painters, of flattened forms suspended in space with no suggestion of depth. &quote;
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To be unfindable and untraceable  that is an English dream! It is an idea of liberty which allows the individual to be present only when he or she chooses, but to retain the right and capacity to melt away. &quote;
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You write in order to change yourself in my view. He was trying to remake his life and become a writer. &quote;
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