290- ] English Literature
Lawrence Durrell
Lawrence
Durrell (born Feb. 27, 1912, Jullundur, India—died Nov. 7, 1990, Sommières,
France) was an English novelist, poet, and writer of topographical books, verse
plays, and farcical short stories who is best known as the author of The
Alexandria Quartet, a series of four interconnected novels.
Durrell
spent most of his life outside England and had little sympathy with the English
character. He was educated in India until he reached age 11 and moved in 1935
to the island of Corfu. During World War II he served as press attaché to the
British embassies in Cairo and Alexandria, and after the war he spent time in
Yugoslavia, Rhodes, Cyprus, and the south of France.
Durrell
wrote several books of poetry and prose before the publication of The
Alexandria Quartet, composed of Justine (1957), Balthazar (1958), Mountolive
(1958), and Clea (1960). The lush and sensuous tetralogy became a best-seller
and won high critical esteem. The first three volumes described, from different
viewpoints, a series of events in Alexandria before World War II; the fourth
carried the story forward into the war years. By its subjective narrative
structure The Alexandria Quartet demonstrates one of its main themes: the
relativity of truth. More important is the implied theme: that sexual
experience, the practice of art, and love are all ways of learning to
understand and finally to pass beyond successive phases of development toward
ultimate truth and reality.
Durrell’s
later novels, Tunc (1968) and its sequel, Nunquam (1970), were less well
received than his earlier fiction. The Avignon Quintet—consisting of Monsieur;
or, The Prince of Darkness (1974), Livia; or, Buried Alive (1978), Constance;
or, Solitary Practices (1982), Sebastian; or, Ruling Passions (1983), and
Quinx; or, The Ripper’s Tale (1985)—received mixed reviews. He first gained
recognition as a poet with A Private Country (1943), and his reputation was
established by Cities, Plains and People (1946), The Tree of Idleness (1953),
and The Ikons (1966). His Collected Poems 1931–74 appeared in 1980. In the
nonfiction works Prospero’s Cell (1945), Reflections on a Marine Venus (1953),
and Bitter Lemons (1957), Durrell describes the Greek islands of Corfu, where
he lived with his first wife in 1937–38; Rhodes, where in 1945–46 he acted as
press officer to the Allied government; and Cyprus, his home from 1952 to 1956.
Many critics regarded his poetry and nonfiction books as his most enduring
achievements. His last book, Caesar’s Vast Ghost: Aspects of Provence, was
published in 1990. Durrell also carried on a 45-year-long correspondence with
American writer Henry Miller.
The
Alexandria Quartet
work
by Durrell
The
Alexandria Quartet, series of four novels by Lawrence Durrell. The lush and
sensuous tetralogy, which consists of Justine (1957), Balthazar (1958),
Mountolive (1958), and Clea (1960), is set in Alexandria, Egypt, during the
1940s. Three of the books are written in the first person, Mountolive in the
third. The first three volumes describe, from different viewpoints, a series of
events in Alexandria before World War II; the fourth carries the story forward
into the war years. The events of the narrative are mostly seen through the
eyes of one L.G. Darley, who observes the interactions of his lovers, friends,
and acquaintances in Alexandria.
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