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In Love with Hell - Drink in the Lives and Work of Eleven Writers (Hardcover)
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In Love with Hell - Drink in the Lives and Work of Eleven Writers (Hardcover)
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'Sympathetic and wonderfully perceptive . . . a heartbreaking read'
NICK COHEN, Critic 'Wise, witty and empathetic . . . outstanding'
JIM CRACE 'A fascinating treatment of the age-old problem of
writers and drink which displays the same subtle qualities as
William Palmer's own undervalued novels' D. J. TAYLOR An 'enjoyable
exploration of an enduringly fascinating subject . . . [Palmer] is
above all a dispassionate critic, and is always attentive to, and
unwaveringly perceptive about the art of his subjects as well as
their relationship with alcohol . . . [his] treatment is
even-handed and largely without judgement. He tries to understand,
without either condoning or censuring, the impulses behind often
reprehensible behaviour' SOUMYA BHATTACHARYA, New Statesman 'A
vastly absorbing and entertaining study of this ever-interesting
subject' ANDREW DAVIES, screenwriter and novelist 'In Love with
Hell is a fascinating and beautifully written account of the lives
of eleven British and American authors whose addiction to alcohol
may have been a necessary adjunct to their writing but ruined their
lives. Palmer's succinct biographies contain fine descriptions of
the writers, their work and the times they lived in; and there are
convincing insights into what led so many authors to take to
drink.' PIERS PAUL READ Why do some writers destroy themselves by
drinking alcohol? Before our health-conscious age it would be true
to say that many writers drank what we now regard as excessive
amounts. Graham Greene, for instance, drank on a daily basis
quantities of spirits and wine and beer most doctors would consider
as being dangerous to his health. But he was rarely out of control
and lived with his considerable wits intact to the age of
eighty-six. W. H. Auden drank the most of a bottle of spirits a
day, but also worked hard and steadily every day until his death.
Even T. S. Eliot, for all his pontifical demeanour, was extremely
fond of gin and was once observed completely drunk on a London Tube
station by a startled friend. These were not writers who are
generally regarded as alcoholics. 'Alcoholic' is, in any case, a
slippery word, as exemplified by Dylan Thomas's definition of an
alcoholic as 'someone you dislike who drinks as much as you.' The
word is still controversial and often misunderstood and misapplied.
What acclaimed novelist and poet William Palmer's book is
interested in is the effect that heavy drinking had on writers, how
they lived with it and were sometimes destroyed by it, and how they
described the whole private and social world of the drinker in
their work. He looks at Patrick Hamilton ('the feverish magic that
alcohol can work'); Jean Rhys ('As soon as I sober up I start
again'); Charles Jackson ('Delirium is a disease of the night');
Malcolm Lowry ('I love hell. I can't wait to go back there'); Dylan
Thomas ('A womb with a view'); John Cheever ('The singing of the
bottles in the pantry'); Flann O'Brien ('A pint of plain is your
only man'); Anthony Burgess ('Writing is an agony mitigated by
drink'); Kingsley Amis ('Beer makes you drunk'); Richard Yates
('The road to Revolutionary Road'); and Elizabeth Bishop ('The
writer's writer's writer').
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