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Burton

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256
PAGES
~4h 16min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
Published 1963 John Murray 5 views
ISBN
0719548187
Editions
Hardcover
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About Author

Hollis Alpert

Hollis Alpert was born in Herkimer, New York. His father left the family when he was still very young. His mother ran a bra and girdle factory. He joined the U.S. Army during World War II and worked as a combat historian, writing historical accounts of major World War II battles and articles about the war for American magazines. After the war, he became an assistant fiction editor at the New York Times in 1950. At the same time, he was working as a freelance film and book reviewer for several other publications. His first novel, For Immediate Release, was published in 1963. He became a film critic for the Saturday Review. In 1966, he founded the National Society of Film Critics with other critics who had been denied membership in the New York Film Critics Circle, which excluded magazine critics. In 1975 he left the Saturday Review to edit for the American Film Magazine. He wrote several books, both under his own name and using the pseudonym "Robert Carroll."

Description

Full-blooded biography, published in England in 1963 but only now making its US debut, of England's most notorious explorer; by the author of Eminent Victorian Soldiers (1985) and The Great War in Africa, 1914-1918 (1986). Ruffian Dick--one of the kinder sobriquets thrown Burton's way--was an ace linguist, translator, ethnographer, pornographer, and all-around troublemaker, as well as the discoverer of Lake Tanganyika and the first Englishman to penetrate Mecca. A man of great courage and initiative, he was also sometimes cruel and pigheaded. Somehow Farwell steers an objective course through the treacherous shoals of Burton's erratic life, avoiding the psychoanalyzing of Fawn Brodie and other recent biographers in favor of an exuberant, fair-minded study. It's all here: Burton's wild childhood (fist-fights and brothels), expulsion from Oxford, years in India as a soldier and Sufi, African and Middle Eastern explorations, roller-coaster literary career, bitter feuds, peculiar marriage to the romantic, devoutly Catholic Isabel--the entire glorious package. Farwell's at his best dishing out Burton's more bizarre opinions and actions--his love of nose rings on women, his advocacy of flaying alive as punishment, his fascination with male brothels. He also does a good job of dissecting Burton's literary style, which wavers from brilliant observation to such clunky euphemisms as ""quadruped creation"" in lieu of ""horse."" ""A misfit in any age"" and ""one of the rarest personalities ever seen on earth""--just two of the many exotic labels Farwell slaps on his subject. Happily, he makes them stick. Mesmerizing.

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