Dan Davin was a novelist and publisher with an attractive
bohemian streak. "Closing Times" is his literary memoirs. In it he
provides recollections of seven of his friends, all writers: Julian
Maclaren-Ross, W. R. Rodgers, Louis MacNeice, Enid Starkie, Joyce
Cary, Dylan Thomas and the Yiddish poet Itzik Manger. The worlds
these writers inhabited were as diverse as the settings of these
memoirs: Fitzrovia just after the war, Oxford, the BBC, a P. E. N.
congress in Edinburgh, the Lower East Side in New York, and a
Dublin pub.
In his introduction he writes, 'I have been governed intuitively
more than consciously, by a principle of inclusion that takes as
primary the personal relationship between my subject and me, and by
my own conception of his character, what interested me about him,
what brought us together, what I liked - or even loved - in him,
what I thought to be the flaws . . .' The result, in effect, is an
informal autobiography, a vivid and telling portrait of a literary
man in his time, as well as a moving lament for 'the makers whom
death has unmade'.
In his Oxford DNB account of Dan Davin's life, Jon Stallworthy
as well as pointing out this memoir is modelled on Johnson's "The
Lives of the English Poets "writes persuasively, ' The most
memorable presence, however, in this gallery of ebullient, funny,
tender portraits is that of the artist himself, cigarette-holder in
hand, eyes half closed against the smoke.'
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