'Gavin Maxwell' FRSL, FIAL, FZS (Sc.), FRGS, FAGS
[1] (
15 July 1914–
7 September 1969) was a
Scottish naturalist and
author, best known for his work with
otters. He wrote the book ''
Ring of Bright Water'' (1960) about how he brought an otter back from
Iraq and raised it in Scotland. ''Ring of Bright Water'' sold more than a million copies and was made into a movie starring
Bill Travers and
Virginia McKenna in 1969. The title 'Ring of Bright Water' was taken from a poem by
Kathleen Raine (1908-2003) who said in her autobiography that Maxwell had been the love of her life.
Biography
Maxwell was the youngest son of Lieutenant-Colonel Aymer Maxwell and Lady Mary Percy, fifth daughter of the
seventh Duke of Northumberland. His grandfather,
Sir Herbert Maxwell, was an
archaeologist,
politician and
natural historian1.
He was raised in the tiny village of
Elrig, near
Port William, in
Wigtownshire, near the south west corner of Scotland, and Maxwell's relatives still reside in the Port William area; the family's ancient
estate and grounds are in nearby
Monreith. Maxwell is an extremely common name in the area.
His education took place at
Stowe and
Hertford College, Oxford1
In
World War II Maxwell served as an instructor with the
Special Operations Executive. After the war, he purchased the Isle of
Soay off
Skye. He tried to establish a
basking shark fishery there between 1945-48. He was unsuccessful, due to bad planning and lack of finance, according to his book ''Harpoon at a Venture'' (1952, since republished under various titles).
In
1956 Maxwell toured the
reed marshes of Southern
Iraq with explorer
Wilfred Thesiger. Maxwell's account of their trip appears in ''A Reed Shaken By The Wind'', later published under the title ''People of the Reeds''. It was hailed by the ''
New York Times'' as "near perfect".
Maxwell next moved to
Sandaig,
[2] a small community opposite
Eilean Iarmain (which he called ''Camusfeàrna'' in his books), on a remote part of the Scottish mainland. There his "otter books" are set. After ''Ring of Bright Water'' (1960), he wrote ''The Rocks Remain'' (1963), in which the otters Edal, Teko, Mossy, and Monday show great differences in personality. ''The Rocks Remain'' is a dark sequel to ''Ring of Bright Water'', as it demonstrates how dangerous it is for humans when their otter companions grow jealous, and how dangerous it is for otters when they lose their fear of humans.
In ''The House of Elrig'' (1965), Maxwell describes his family history and his passion for the calf-country, Galloway, where he was born. It was during this period that he met
Peter Scott, the ornithologist, and the young
Terry Nutkins who went on to become a children's television presenter. Privately homosexual,
[3] Maxwell married Lavinia Renton (née Lascelles) on 1 February 1962; however, the marriage lasted little more than a year and they were divorced in 1964.
[4]
After his Sandaig home was destroyed by fire in 1968, Maxwell moved to the lighthouse cottage of
Eilean Bàn (White Island), an island he owned off the coast of the
Isle of Skye.
In 1969, Maxwell invited
John Lister-Kaye to move to Eilean Bàn to help him work on a book about British wild mammals and to assist in building a zoo on the island. Lister-Kaye accepted the invitation and moved to the island, but both projects had to be abandoned when Maxwell died from cancer later that same year.
[5]
Eilean Bàn now supports a pier of the 1990s-built Skye Bridge, and, despite modern traffic a hundred feet or so above, the island is a commemorative otter sanctuary. Also on the island is a museum dedicated to Maxwell. A stone otter was also erected in the grounds of
Port William Golf Course as a
memorial to Maxwell.
Maxwell suffered from
bipolar disorder throughout his life, according to Douglas Botting.
Maxwell's literary agent was
Peter Janson-Smith,
[3] who was also agent for his contemporary, the author
Ian Fleming.
Unusual adventures with exotic animals, and frequent stories of disasters, provide the main appeal of Maxwell's books. Although he could have pursued a successful diplomatic career like many of his class, or a conventional
lairdship, he rejected both for a simpler lifestyle.
Maxwell's Otter
He brought an otter back from
Iraq and raised it in Scotland, an escapade which he described in ''Ring of Bright Water''. He took the otter, called Mijbil, to the London Zoological Society, where it was decided that this was a previously unknown
sub-species of
Smooth-coated Otter, and it was named after him: ''Lutrogale perspicillata maxwelli'', or Maxwell's Otter. It is thought to have lived in the
Tigris-Euphrates alluvial salt marsh of
Iraq, but it has been suggested that it may have become extinct as a result of the large scale drainage that has taken place since the
1960s.
Bibliography
★ ''Harpoon at a Venture'' (1952)
★
★ Paperback reissue (
1984): ISBN 0-14-006987-9
★
★ Paperback reissue (
2005): ISBN 1-899863-28-1
★ ''God Protect Me from My Friends''
Longmans (
1956)
★
★ Paperback reissue (
1972): ISBN 0-330-02787-5
★ ''A Reed Shaken By The Wind - a Journey Through the Unexplored Marshlands of Iraq'' Longmans (
1959)
★
★ Paperback reissue (
Eland Books,
2003) ISBN 0-907871-93-3
★ ''The Ten Pains of Death'' (1959)
★ ''Ring of Bright Water'' (illustrated by
Peter Scott) Longmans (1960)
★
★ Paperback reissue: ISBN 0-14-003923-6
★ ''The Otters' Tale'' Longmans (
1962; a children's version of ''Ring of Bright Water'')
★ ''The Rocks Remain'' Longmans (
1963)
★ ''The House of Elrig'' Longmans (
1965)
★ ''Lords of the Atlas: Morocco, the rise and fall of the House of Glaoua'' Longmans (
1966)
★
★ Reissue, (
Eland Books) (
2000) ISBN 0-304-35419-8
★ ''Seals of the World'' (
1967)
★ ''Raven Seek Thy Brother'' Longmans (
1969)
Biography
★ ''The White Island'' by
John Lister-Kaye (about the author's time working with Maxwell) Longman (1972) ISBN 0-582-10903-5.
★ ''Maxwell's Ghost - An Epilogue to Gavin Maxwell's Camusfearna'' by Richard Frere,
Victor Gollancz, (
1976) ISBN 0-575-02044-X
★
★ Paperback reissue 1999, ISBN 1-84158-003-1
★ ''Gavin Maxwell, A Life'' by
Douglas Botting, HarperCollins (
1993) ISBN 0-246-13046-6 (authorized biography)
★
★ Republished as ''The Saga of Ring of Bright Water - The Enigma of Gavin Maxwell'' Neil Wilson Publishing Ltd, (
2000) ISBN 1-897784-85-6
[1]
References & notes
1. ''The Rocks Remain''
2. Sandaig is at , to the southwest of Glenelg
3.
Maxwell's Ghost, , Richard, Frere, Victor Gollancz, ,
4. thePeerage.com
5. Lister-Kaye
6.
Maxwell's Ghost, , Richard, Frere, Victor Gollancz, ,
External links
★
Biography by Maxwell's nephew
★
Eilean Bàn
★
Maxwell's Otter
★
IUCN listing for Maxwell's Otter
★
Visit Camusfearna (Sandaig)