A Sort of Life-Graham Greene
Autobiography
A Sort of Life
Graham Greene
Graham Greene calls his
autobiography ‘A Sort of Life’ because unlike a biography ‘an autobiography is
selective: it begins later and it ends prematurely’. He finishes his story with
the years of failure which followed publication of his first book. He was then
only twenty-seven, an early age to end the narrative of a life written at the
age of sixty-five. But his reason is that ‘failure is also like death and thus
provides for a very satisfactory ending’. And his motive for writing his autobiography,
‘a desire to reduce the chaos of experience to some sort of order, and a hungry
curiosity’.
He writes in his inimitable
terse and unaffected style. Book is short, some one hundred and fifty pages. He
recalls his childhood spent in Berkhamstead, his days at Oxford, his years at
The Times as a subeditor, the thrill of the publication of his first novel The
Man Within, which received a moderate success and then a string of failures. He
writes about extreme melancholia and boredom which afflicted him from the early
childhood. He frankly narrates the depression and frustration he suffered in
his first love, a crush on the governess of his younger siblings. He lays bare
his manic-depressive personality and his attempts at courting death, that he
indulged just to ward off boredom. Unabashedly he describes sessions of
psychoanalysis he undertook in his teens, and finds it a beautiful experience.
It’s exciting to peep in to the
mind of an author whose work one has admired. Greene’s books are matchless in
one particular aspect. He consistently
creates an atmosphere in his novels, called Greene Country by many critics,
which not only pervades his complete novel but is like a trademark of the
author, being noticeable in most of his books. This is not the imaginary world
of many fiction writers, but a real place inhabited by men who possess a few
admirable traits among innumerable vice like all their brethren. They plod
through their lives looking for small joys. They are riddled with doubts on
religion, ethics and human conduct. And if they bother about these subtle queries
it is in pursuit of the most conspicuous and elusive objective, Happiness. It’s riveting to watch as the curtain is
raised and one glimpses the working of this great mind. I eagerly wait to begin
Ways of Escape, his other book on himself.
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