Memoirs of a Polyglot
William Gerhardie
Written with rare candour, this is William Gerhardie’s enchanting and entertaining memoir of his early life.
Gerhardie writes about his grandparents and parents, and about his childhood in St Petersburg where his father, a British cotton manufacturer, settled in the 1890s. He joined the Scots Greys in the First World War, and was commissioned and posted to the British Embassy at Petrograd, where he saw the Russian revolution in various stages. At Oxford, he wrote
Futility
, the first of his novels.
In the 1920s and 1930s, Gerhardie was friends with many of the most interesting people of the era, from Lord Beaverbrook to the Sitwells, and he writes brilliantly and amusingly about the literary and political scene of that time. Michael Holroyd notes in his preface that ‘The narrative, which contains so many percipient pen portraits, stops for no man, but merely seems to pick them up in its stride'.
Memoirs of a Polyglot
is illustrated with photographs, many of them from Gerhardie’s family albums.
‘To those of my generation he was the most important new novelist to appear in our young life.’ Graham Greene
‘William Gerhardie is our Gogol’s
Overcoat
. We all came out of him.’ Olivia Manning
‘In my opinion Gerhardie has genius.’ Arnold Bennett
‘He is a comic writer of genius ... but his art is profoundly serious.’ C. P. Snow
Tags
Categorised as:
Non-fiction
Sub-categories:
Biography & Memoir
Places:
Russia;
St Petersburg
Genres & Themes:
Faber Finds;
WWI;
Writers;
Intellectuals;
Aristocracy
God's Fifth Column
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God’s Fifth Column is the last book of William Gerhardie. Well known in the 1920s and 1930s chiefly as a novelist (whose books were ...
Futility
William Gerhardie
This is the first novel by William Gerhardie, first published in 1922, and it was made famous by H. G. Wells, who described it as ...
The Polyglots
William Gerhardie
First published in 1925, this is perhaps the most acclaimed of William Gerhardie's novels and was celebrated by Anthony Powell as 'a classic'. Like ...
William Gerhardie
Dido Davies
On the strength of novels such as Futility and The Polyglots, William Gerhardie was hailed as the most brilliant writer of the 1920s, admired by ...
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