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Robin Maugham (1916–1981)

Autor von The Wrong People

36+ Werke 727 Mitglieder 9 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet die Namen: Robin Maughm, Robin Maugham

Hinweis zur Begriffsklärung:

(eng) Please do not combine with Robert Maugham, his great-grandfather.

Reihen

Werke von Robin Maugham

The Wrong People (1967) 107 Exemplare
The Servant (1949) 91 Exemplare
The Link (1969) 59 Exemplare
Conversations with Willie (1978) 50 Exemplare
Enemy (1981) 39 Exemplare
Escape from the Shadows (1972) 32 Exemplare
Das zweite Fenster (1968) 29 Exemplare
Elizabeth R (Plays of the year special) (1971) — Playwright — 28 Exemplare
Behind the Mirror (1955) 27 Exemplare
The Sign (1974) 22 Exemplare
The last encounter (1973) 16 Exemplare
The Slaves of Timbuktu (1961) 14 Exemplare
Nomad (1947) 11 Exemplare
Search for Nirvana (1709) 11 Exemplare
Lovers in Exile (1977) 10 Exemplare
Line on Ginger (1951) 9 Exemplare
The Man with Two Shadows (1959) 9 Exemplare
Der grune Schatten (1966) 9 Exemplare
Black Tent and Other Stories (1973) 8 Exemplare
The Corridor (1980) 7 Exemplare
The Rough and the Smooth (1951) 7 Exemplare
Come to dust (1968) 6 Exemplare
November Reef (1964) 5 Exemplare
Journey to Siwa (1950) 5 Exemplare
Knock on Teak (1976) 4 Exemplare
Testament Cairo 1898 (1972) 4 Exemplare
The Dividing Line (1979) 4 Exemplare
The Deserters (1981) 1 Exemplar
Convoy 1 Exemplar
Green Shade (1966) 1 Exemplar
The 1946 ms 1 Exemplar

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The Black Tent [1956 film] (2011) — Original book — 3 Exemplare

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Chapman & Hall, 1950. Hardcover. 1st Edition. The Oasis of Siwa was famous in ancient times for the Oracle of Jupiter Ammon; Alexander the Great the most distinguished of many visitors to that shrine. Siwa has since been the foal of rarer pilgrimages; but even without an oracle the place, by its beauty and isolation, has continued to exercise a fascination on travellers. In 1850, Chapman & Hall published St. John Bayle s Views of the Oasis of Siwah. In 1950, they published Robin Maugham s account of his visit Siwah. He has already shown in his previous works (Nomad, North African Notebook, etc.) his ability to depict Arab lands, which have been so notable a source of inspiration for writers of English prose. His description of the town of Siwa and its inhabitants is illustrated by the fine photographs of Dimitri Papadimou. The photos and texts together produce a lively entertainment for the armchair traveller.… (mehr)
 
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Sergio_Volpi | Oct 14, 2020 |

Told sequentially by a number of different narrators, this novel is based loosely on the Tichborne Case (as was the very different novel Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey). It's the mid-19th century. Sex addict James Steede, set to inherit a title and a modest fortune, flees his domineering mother and his possibly pregnant girlfriend -- he's primarily homosexual but isn't averse to heterosexual liaisons -- for a life on the ocean wave, finally landing, after much gay revelry in the Americas, in Australia, safely anonymous because (in an insurance scam) a ship in which he traveled is supposed to have been lost at sea with the death of all aboard. Years later, his mother advertises for the return of her son, whom she's convinced is still alive.

Someone arrives back at the ol' family pile in England who's the spitting image of the missing James and can answer all sorts of questions about intimate personal and family details . . . but is this in fact James? Further, is the genuineness or otherwise of his claim as important to the likely outcome of the law case as the turmoil of conflicting special interests surrounding the investigation?

I found the opening one-third of this book a trifle daunting, to be honest, because James, who narrates this section (and is thus in the role of identification character), delights in telling us all about his various gay escapades and his enjoyment of them; my reaction was as if stuck next to that obsessive soccer fan on the train who insists on telling you all the details of Really Good soccer matches he's attended on the grounds that, sooner or later, through his doing so he'll make you see sense and start loving soccer as much as he does. (If he were talking about cricket, on the other hand, he wouldn't be a bore at all . . .) But Maugham's a surprisingly good tale-teller, so I weathered those hundred pages and thereafter was absolutely absorbed. I'm not sure he delivered the "terror and surprise . . . unforgettable climax" the blurb-writer promises, and nor is this really a mystery, whatever its subtitle indicates; but overall I enjoyed it a surprising amount.
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JohnGrant1 | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 11, 2013 |
"Esta novela breve, ambientada en Londres poco después de la II Guerra Mundial, es un relato confesional con la fuerza de un moderno Retrato de Dorian Gray. Lo cuenta Richard Merton, y es la historia de su íntimo amigo de la guerra, Tony, de cómo va cayendo progresivamente bajo la influencia de su nuevo y extraño mayordomo, Barrett. Tony rompe sus vínculos con toda su vida anterior y con sus amistades, y pronto parece dominado por ese nuevo personaje siniestro. El sirviente fue llevada al cine en 1963 por Joseph Losey con guión de Harold Pinter, y es en la actualidad una de las películas clave del cine británico."

(edit. promo.)

Una maravilla del estudio psicológico de la dependencia. La comodidad va pasando factura y al final el protagonista queda tan enganchado que se retrae a niveles muy primarios.

Por casualidades de la vida, dieron la peli en La 2 al de poco de habernos leído la novela, así que, aunque me parece recordar que la dieron un poco tarde, nos quedamos a verla. Craso error por mi parte (la peli es cojonuda, por cierto. Una demostración más de la sabiduría de Calparsoro, que me dijo la fecha de estreno sin despeinarse un pelo de la ceja. Cómo le echo de menos) porque no sabía cuál de los dos protagonistas era Bogarde y le estuve señalando a O. toda la peli el que era el equivocado.
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Txikito | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 19, 2013 |
As a young man, Robin Maugham blackmailed his famous uncle W. Somerset Maugham by threatening to write a biography that exposed the great man's life. Appalled at the prospect, Somerset Maugham paid Robin an enormous sum of money not to write such a book. Having taken the money, Robin broke his promise, and immediately after his uncle’s death, published Somerset and All the Maughams. In the process, he violated WSM's lifelong desire for privacy by publicly 'outing' him as homosexual. (This backstory has been detailed in several biographies of Somerset Maugham, including the recent one by Selina Hastings). With the passage of nearly half a century, the author's dishonesty and selfish motives continue to cast doubts on credibility of his book, as do elements of its contents.

In the first half of this book (~116 pages), Robin details his attempts to track the history of the Maugham lineage. His efforts were amateurish but modestly successful. To his credit, Robin unearthed obscure genealogical details dating back to the mid- 1700s, located the houses in France and England where his uncle had spent his childhood, and in both countries (allegedly) found elderly persons who recalled him as a boy. Robin’s naiveté is reflected in his penchant for imagining physical resemblances between his uncle and distant relatives, such as Maugham’s great- great- great- uncle (the Reverend William Maugham) from the 1700s. Despite Robin's inference of a close resemblance, the Reverend looks (to my eye) nothing at all like Somerset Maugham. Further, as an amateur at geneology, Robin overlooked the fact that his uncle and the Reverend William were separated by six generations, meaning that their closest ancestor is one of 64 individuals of that generation from whom WSM was also directly descended -- making any physical resemblance highly unlikely. Another such case involved an American named Ralph Maugham who had no traceable connection to the author. Robin is impressed to find that the man’s older brother had a stammer (like his uncle), from which he naively infers a family connection.

In the second half of this book, the author focuses specifically on W. Somerset Maugham. There is much conjecture based on amateur psychology, as Robin attempts to infer the formative influences on WSM’s life. For example, he speculates that if Willie’s childhood prayer to be relieved of his stammer had been answered, that he would not have later become agnostic. The personal anecdotes that Robin relates are what make the book of potential interest to modern readers. Many show the great writer in unguarded moments; some are amusing; and several appear to reveal insights into the author’s private musings. Others reveal details about WSM’s sexual inclinations and alleged activities, and too many of them show the author in his declining years after senility has set in. In search of profit, Robin clearly cared nothing for the dignity, privacy, or reputation of his famous uncle. Indeed, he even characterizes WSM's fiction in disparaging tones.

Such issues aside, is Robin Maugham’s account credible? Apparently not, and that problem places this entire book under suspicion. Direct evidence of Robin’s penchant for editing peoples' words comes from comparison of quotations in WSM’s “The Summing Up” to Robin’s own version of what the book says. The credibility issue extends beyond the precise wording of quotations to entire incidents reported by Robin. His co-author on the subsequent “Conversations with Willie” has publically revealed that Robin routinely invented stories about his uncle with which to spice up his books. The revelation is devastating to Robin Maugham's credibility.

In the present work, Robin too often provides an alleged, direct quote from Somerset Maugham to illustrate a point he wishes to make. As one of many examples, a quotation about the inborn nature of homosexuality that he attributes to WSM reflects a 1960s- era sensibility, and it is hard to imagine it coming from the great author himself. Likewise, WSM is quoted as saying that he’d once persuaded himself that he was three quarters normal and one quarter “queer,” whereas “it was the other way round.” The quote has been widely repeated, often without attribution, in nearly every biographical work dealing with the author. Yet no corroborative evidence exists that WSM ever said it. Robin Maugham's chief legacy may well be the invention of a statement about Somerset Maugham's sexual makeup that the author never uttered.

In sum, Somerset and All the Maughams reports interesting anecdotes about the great writer from a relative who knew him well. Unfortunately, it is marred by questionable inferences and persistent suspicions about its credibility. Thus, the wise reader would do well to remain skeptical of its contents.
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danielx | Dec 30, 2012 |

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Werke
36
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1
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727
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#34,931
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½ 3.4
Rezensionen
9
ISBNs
79
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6
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