Born in 1912 in British India, Durrell's childhood in the foothills of the Himalayas instilled in him a lifelong fascination with cultural hybridity and dislocation. After moving to England as a teenager, he rebelled against its 'mildewed' ethos, fleeing to Corfu in 1935 with his first wife, Nancy Myers. There, amid olive groves and azure seas, he began honing his lyrical prose and formed a lifelong friendship with Henry Miller, who hailed him as a 'genius.' These formative years, immortalised in his brother Gerald's My Family and Other Animals, became the bedrock of Durrell's belief that 'place' was a living character in literature, a force that shapes and influences the characters and their actions.
This book illuminates Durrell's masterworks, from The Alexandria Quartet (19571960), a four-part symphony of overlapping perspectives set in wartime Egypt, to The Avignon Quintet (19741985), a metaphysical puzzle blending history, heresy, and existential inquiry. His prosedense, poetic, and unapologetically sensualinvites readers to wander cities where love and espionage intertwine and landscapes pulse with mythic resonance. Chapters dissect his narrative innovations: nonlinear timelines, unreliable narrators, and a Proustian fixation on how memory distorts truth. At its core, Durrell's work asks: Can we ever truly know another person or even ourselves? His unique narrative style will leave you intrigued and fascinated.
Yet Durrell's life was as charged as his fiction. A serial romantic with four marriages and countless affairs, he wove his passions and failures into his characters, from the melancholic Darley to the cunning Justine. His career as a British diplomat and press officer in Cyprus during the 1950s encyclopedias uprising inspired the poignant memoir Bitter Lemons (1957), which juxtaposes the island's beauty with its colonial fractures. Though criticised for exoticising the Mediterranean and sidestepping political complexities, Durrell's portraits of "the East" remain hauntingly evocative, blending admiration with ambiguity. His personal struggles will make you feel empathetic and connected to the author.
This book is both a biography and a literary pilgrimage. It invites readers to traverse the "Durrellian" landscapewhere a café in Alexandria or a Cypriot village becomes a stage for human comedyand ponder Durrell's assertion that "we are all children of our landscape."
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