H.E.Bates Autobiography: "The Vanished World", "The Blossoming World", "The World in Ripeness"
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #352385 in Books
- Published on: 2006-10-19
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 500 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Combining Bates' three acclaimed autobiographies, "The Vanished World", "The Blossoming World" and "The World in Ripeness", this volume is a tribute to one of the most prolific and popular of English writers, described by Graham Greene as Britain's successor to Chekhov. In his lifetime, Herbert Earnest Bates wrote poetry, plays and essays, but is best known as a novelist and master short-story writer. His fiction, like his autobiographies, are celebrated for their memorable characters and their rich, lyrical evocation of period and place, particularly English rural life in times gone by. "The Vanished World", the first volume of Bates' autobiography, depicts his childhood in the Nene Valley, where the beauty of the English countryside inspired him from an early age. "The Blossoming World" begins when Bates is twenty and his first novel, "The Two Sisters", was published. Taking the reader through to 1941, this volume describes Bates' developing literary career, married life and his spirited reaction to the impending war. "The World in Ripeness" tells of Bates' time in the R.A.F., which he joined in 1941 as a commissioned short story writer, and his service in Burma, which inspired "The Purple Plain" group of novels.
Customer Reviews
Country Matters or Does It Matter?
A well-written autobiography by the author of so many popular countryside-based tales, filmed for TV in the early 1970's (what happened to those Country Matters or Country Tales? Would be good to see them on DVD if they still exist). I learned a few things I did not know, such as that, around the time just before WW1, streets and even whole towns were in a state of often physically brawling competition with each other (I suppose that, in the UK, such warfare mainly exists now only in Northern Ireland). I was also interested to read his account of his visit to Calcutta in 1945. He notes that the faces of the Indian members of the pre-Independence legislature were "marked by evil" and corruption. Ghastly, though he says that, from an account he read, it was even worse in 1970, at the time this book was partly written, 30 years or more after Independence and the end of British rule.
I got tired of the typical writer's self-absorption after a while but it is in parts an interesting read.



