(Redirected from Graham Greene (writer))''This article is about the writer. For the actor, see
Graham Greene (actor).''
'Henry Graham Greene',
OM,
CH (
October 2,
1904 –
April 3,
1991) was an
English playwright,
novelist,
short story writer, travel writer and
critic whose works explore the ambivalent moral and political issues of the modern world. Greene combined serious literary acclaim with wide popularity. Although Greene objected strongly to being described as a "Catholic novelist" rather than as a "novelist who happened to be Catholic",
Catholic religious themes are at the root of many of his novels, including ''
Brighton Rock'', ''
The Heart of the Matter'', ''
The End of the Affair'', ''
Monsignor Quixote'', ''
A Burnt-Out Case'', and his famous work ''
The Power and the Glory''. Works such as ''
The Quiet American'' also show an avid interest in the workings of
international politics.
Life and work
Childhood
Graham Greene was born in
Berkhamsted,
Hertfordshire, the fourth of six children — his younger brother
Hugh became the
Director-General of the BBC; elder brother
Raymond was an eminent physician and mountaineer.
His parents, Charles Henry Greene and Marion Greene (née Raymond),
were first cousins, members of a large, influential family who included the
Greene King brewery owners, bankers, and businessmen. Charles Greene was Second Master at
Berkhamsted School, the
headmaster of which was Dr
Thomas Fry (also married to a cousin of Charles). Another cousin was the
right-wing pacifist
Ben Greene, whose politics led to his
internment during
World War II.
In 1910, Charles Greene succeeded Dr Fry as headmaster; Graham attended the school. Bullied and profoundly depressed as a
boarder, he attempted
suicide several times, some, he claimed, by
Russian roulette; Michael Shelden's biography discredits that. In 1921, at age 17, he was psychoanalysed for six months in London, afterwards returning to school as a day boy; school friends included
Claud Cockburn and
Peter Quennell.
While an undergraduate at
Balliol College, Oxford his first work, a volume of poetry, was published, but not much praised.
Early career
After graduation, Greene unsuccessfully took up
journalism, first in the city of
Nottingham (recurring in his novels as the epitome of mean provincial life), and then as a sub-editor on ''
The Times''. While in Nottingham he started corresponding with
Vivien Dayrell-Browning, a
Roman Catholic convert who had written him to correct him on a point of Catholic doctrine. Greene converted to Catholicism in 1926 (described in ''A Sort of Life'') and was baptised in February the same year
[1], they married in 1927, and had two children, Lucy (b. 1933) and Francis (b. 1936; d. 1987). In 1948, Greene abandoned Vivien for Catherine Walston, yet remained married to her.
Novels and other works
Greene's first published novel was ''
The Man Within'' (1929), its reception emboldened him to quit his sub-editor job at ''The Times'' and work as a full-time novelist, however, the next two books were unsuccessful; he later disowned them. His first, true success was ''
Stamboul Train'' (1932), adapted as a the film ''Orient Express'' (1934); as with this novel, many of his books would be cinematically adapted.
He supplemented his novelist's income with freelance journalism, and book and film reviews for ''
The Spectator'', and co-editing the magazine ''
Night and Day'', which folded in 1937 shortly after Greene's film review of ''Wee Willie Winkie'', featuring nine-year-old
Shirley Temple, cost the magazine a lost
libel lawsuit. Greene's review claimed that Temple displayed ''a certain adroit coquetry which appealed to middle-aged men''; it is now considered one of the first criticisms of the sexualisation of children for entertainment.
He originally divided his fiction in two
genres: (i) thrillers (mystery and suspense books), such as ''
Our Man in Havana'', that he described as entertainments; often with notable philosophic edges, and (ii) literary works, such as ''
The Power and the Glory'', on which he thought his literary reputation was to be based.
As his career lengthened, however, Greene and his readers both found the entertainments of nearly as high literary value as the formal literary writing. His later efforts, such as ''
The Human Factor'', ''
The Comedians'', ''
Our Man in Havana'', and ''
The Quiet American'', combine these modes in compressed, but remarkably insightful work. He also wrote the screenplay, and afterward the short story, for the now-classic
film noir,
The Third Man (1949).
Greene also wrote short stories and
plays that were well-received, although he always was a novelist, foremost. His long, successful career and great readership (for a serious literary novelist) led to hope he would be awarded the
Nobel Prize in Literature; although considered in 1974, he was not awarded it. Greene's friend and occasional publisher,
Michael Korda, wrote in his memoir, ''Another Life'' (1999), that Greene believed he was always one vote short of the prize, withheld by a judge who disliked his Catholicism and left-wing sympathies and "who seemed determined to outlive him".
Writing style and themes
The literary style of Graham Greene was one of the most recognizable writing styles in twentieth-century English literature. The
novels are written in lean, realistic prose, having clear, exciting plots (avoiding
modernist experimentation, which might account for his popularity), and using cinematic visual sense in description. Yet, he concentrated on portraying the characters' internal lives, the mental, emotional, and spiritual depths. Usually, they are deeply troubled with internal, existential struggles, are world-weary, and cynical, finding themselves rootlessly existing in seedy and sordid circumstances. The stories usually occurred in poor, hot, and dusty tropical backwaters in countries such as
Mexico,
West Africa,
Vietnam,
Cuba,
Haiti, and
Argentina, which led to the the coining of the expression "Greeneland" to describe such settings.
The novels of Graham Greene often had religious themes at the centre. In his
literary criticism, he attacked most
modern literature for having lost the religious sense and for lacking such themes, which he argued, resulted in dull, superficial characters who: ''wandered about like cardboard symbols through a world that is paper-thin''. Only in recovering the religious element, the awareness of the drama of the struggle in the soul carrying the infinite consequences of
salvation and
damnation, and of the ultimate metaphysical realities of good and evil, sin and grace, could the novel recover its dramatic power. Suffering and unhappiness are omnipresent in the fallen world Greene depicts, and Catholicism is presented against a background of unvarying human evil, sin and doubt. Indeed,
V. S. Pritchett praised Greene as the first English novelist since
Henry James to present, and grapple with, the reality of evil.
[Crisis Magazine.]
The novels often powerfully portray the Christian drama of the struggles within the individual soul from the Catholic perspective. Greene was criticised for certain tendencies in an unorthodox direction — in the world, sin is omnipresent to the degree that the vigilant struggle to avoid sinful conduct is doomed to failure, hence, not central to holiness. Friend and fellow Catholic writer
Evelyn Waugh attacked that as a revival of the
Quietist heresy. This aspect of his work also was criticised by the theologian
Hans Urs von Balthasar as giving sin a mystique.
Although the inner suffering and struggle with self-doubt of the characters reflects a central Christian reality of humanity's fall from grace, they rarely exhibit other realities of the Christian life: simple, uncomplicated faith and its true, inner peace and joy. To the latter point, Greene responded that constructing a vision of pure faith and goodness in the novel was beyond his talents. Praise of Greene from an orthodox Catholic point of view, by Edward Short, is in ''Crisis'' magazine
[1], and a mainstream Catholic critique is presented by
Joseph Pearce[2].
Catholicism's prominence decreased in the later writings. The supernatural realities that haunted the earlier work declined and was replaced with a
humanistic perspective, a change reflected in his public criticism of orthodox Catholic teaching. Left-wing political critiques assumed greater importance in his novels, for example, he attacked the
American policy in Vietnam in ''The Quiet American''; the tormented believers portrayed were more likely to have faith in
Communism than in Catholicism. Critics usually agree, however, that his profound novels are the early ones wherein Catholicism has a major role.
Unlike other "Catholic writers" such as
Evelyn Waugh and
Anthony Burgess, Greene's politics were always left-wing, though some biographers think politics mattered little to him. In his later years, he was a strong critic of
American imperialism, and supported the
Cuban leader
Fidel Castro, whom he had met.
[Kirjasto.] For Greene and politics, see also Anthony Burgess ''Politics in the Novels of Graham Greene''
[2] In ''Ways of Escape'', reflections of his Mexican trip, he complained that Mexico's government was insufficiently left-wing when compared with Cuba's
[3]. In Greene's opinion, “Conservatism and Catholicism should be .... impossible bedfellows”.
[4].
Nonetheless, despite his seriousness, Graham Greene greatly enjoyed parody, even of himself. In 1949, when the ''
New Statesman'' magazine held a contest for parodies of Greene's distinctive writing style, he submitted a pseudonymous entry and won second prize; the first prize was awarded to a parody entered by his younger brother
Hugh.
The resulting work, ''The Stranger's Hand'', was later completed by another writer and cinematically rendered by the Italian film director
Mario Soldati. In 1965, Greene again entered a similar ''New Statesman'' Graham Greene writing style parody contest, again pseudonymously, and that time won an honourable mention.
Travel
Throughout his life, Graham Greene travelled far from
England, to what he called the world's wild and remote places. The travels allowed him opportunity to spy on behalf of the
United Kingdom, in
Sierra Leone during the
Second World War. Curiously, it was Soviet
double agent Kim Philby who recruited Greene to
MI6. As a novelist, he wove the colourful characters he met and the exciting places where he lived to the moral fabric of his novels.
Despite love of travel, he first left
Europe relatively late in life, at 31 years of age, in 1935, on a trip to
Liberia that produced the
travel book ''
Journey Without Maps''. His 1938 trip to
Mexico, to see the effects of the government's campaign of forced
anti-Catholic secularisation was paid by the
Roman Catholic Church. That voyage produced two books, the factual ''The Lawless Roads'' (published as ''Another Mexico'' in the U.S.), and the novel ''
The Power and the Glory''. In 1953, the
Vatican office censored ''The Power and the Glory'', though later, in a private audience with Greene,
Pope Paul VI told him to forget about the religious troubles of the Mexicans. Greene travelled to the
Haiti of
François Duvalier, alias "Papa Doc", where occurred the story of ''
The Comedians'' (1966). On the lighter side, the owner of the
Hotel Oloffson, in
Port-au-Prince, where Greene frequently stayed, named a room in his honour.
Many of his novels have been filmed, notably
Brighton Rock (1947), ''
The Honorary Consul'' (1983), (a
1958 version whose plot substantially departed from Greene's and a
2002 remake that followed Greene's book more closely), and ''
The End of the Affair'' (1999). Moreover, he also wrote several original
screenplays, most famously for the film ''
The Third Man'' (1949).
Final years
In 1966, Greene moved to
Antibes, to be close to Yvonne Cloetta, whom he had known for years, a relationship that endured until his death. In 1981 he was awarded the
Jerusalem Prize, awarded to writers concerned with the freedom of the individual in society. One of his final works, the pamphlet ''J'Accuse — The Dark Side of Nice'' (1982), concerns a legal matter embroiling him and his extended family in
Nice. He declared that
organized crime flourished in Nice, because the city's upper levels of civic government had protected judicial and police corruption; the accusation provoked a libel lawsuit he lost
[3]. Yet, in 1994, he was vindicated — after death — when the former mayor of Nice,
Jacques Médecin, was imprisoned upon conviction for corruption and associated crimes.
He lived the last years of his life in
Vevey, on
Lake Geneva, in
Switzerland. His book ''Dr. Fischer of Geneva or the Bomb Party'' (1989) bases its themes on combined philosophic and geographic influences. He had ceased attending
Mass and confessing in the 1950s, but received the
sacraments from a Father Leopaldo Durán, a Spanish priest who became a friend. On dying at age 86 in 1991, he was buried in the
Corsier-sur-Vevey cemetery.
His official biographer,
Norman Sherry, published the third, final volume of ''The Life of Graham Greene'' in October of 2004. The writing of this biography was in itself a story, Sherry followed Greene's footsteps, suffering the diseases that Greene suffered and in the same place. The biography reveals that Greene continued reporting to British intelligence until his life's end, leading literary scholars and readers to entertain the existentially-provocative question: ''Was Graham Greene a novelist who also was a spy, or was he a spy whose life-long novelist's career was the perfect cover?''
Trivia
★ The novel ''
Brighton Rock'' is a particularly rich source of cultural allusions. It is quoted in "
The West Wing" Season 2 finale episode "
Two Cathedrals". President Bartlett quotes Greene saying, "You can't conceive, nor can I, the appalling strangeness of the mercy of God." He then goes on to say, "I don't know whose ass he was kissing because I think you're [God] just vindictive."
6 On
Julian Cope's first solo album, ''World Shut Your Mout'', one track is called "Kolly Kibber's Birthday", after the character in ''Brighton Rock''. The
Morrissey song "NOW MY HEART IS FULL" lists four more of its characters:"Tell all of my friends/(I don't have too many/Just some rain-coated lovers' puny brothers)/Dallow, Spicer, Pinkie, Cubitt."
★ Greene's short story "
The Destructors" was featured in the movie ''
Donnie Darko'', where a character confused him with ''
Bonanza's
Lorne Greene.
★ Greene features in a song by
The Volvos entitled 'Get Yourself a Good Wife' from the 1991 album ''Making it Up''.
★ Greene appears as character and narrator in the
Doctor Who novel ''The Turing Test'', which gives a fictional account of Greene's time as spymaster in Sierra Leone and World War II Paris.
★ Graham Greene makes a cameo appearance in François Truffaut movie "La Nuit Americaine" (1973) as an English Insurance Broker.
References
1. the conversion happened after having argued with father Trollope, as Greene was defending atheism. - ''The Power and the Glory'' New York: Viking, 1990. Introduction by John Updike, p. xiv
2. in ''Journal of Contemporary History'' Vol. 2, No. 2, (Apr. 1967), pp. 93-99.
3. P.xii of John Updike's introduction to ''The Power and the Glory'' New York: Viking, 1990.
4. As cited on p.xii of John Updike's introduction to ''The Power and the Glory'' New York: Viking, 1990.
6. as cited from http://www.whysanity.net/monos/westwing3.html
List of major works
See
List of books by Graham Greene for all works.
★ ''
Brighton Rock'' (1938)
★ ''
The Power and the Glory'' (1940)
★ ''
The Heart of the Matter'' (1948)
★ ''
The Third Man'' (1949) (novella, as a basis for the screenplay}
★ ''
The End of the Affair'' (1951)
★ ''
The Quiet American'' (1955)
★ ''
The Potting Shed'' (1957)
★ ''
Ways of Escape'' (1980) (autobiography)
Further reading
★
Paul O'Prey, A Reader's Guide to Graham Greene, Thames and Hudson, 1988
★
Kelly, Richard Michael, ''Graham Greene'', Ungar, 1984
★
Kelly, Richard Michael, ''Graham Greene: A Study of the Short Fiction''. Twayne, 1992.
★
Duran, Leopoldo , ''Graham Greene: Friend and Brother'', translated by Euan Cameron, HarperCollins
★
Shelden, Michael , ''Graham Greene: The Enemy Within'', (pub. William Heinemann, 1994), Random House ed. 1995: ISBN 0-679-42883-6
★
Sherry, Norman (1989-2004), ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 1 1904-1939'', (pub. Random House UK, 1989, ISBN 0-224-02654-2), Viking ed. 1989: ISBN 0-670-81376-1, Penguin reprint 2004: ISBN 0-14-200420-0
★
Sherry, Norman, ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 2 1939-1955'', (pub. Viking 1994: ISBN 0-670-86056-5), Penguin reprint 2004: ISBN 0-14-200421-9
★
Sherry, Norman, ''The Life of Graham Greene: vol. 3 1955-1991'', (pub. Viking 2004, ISBN 0-670-03142-9)
★ ''The Graham Greene Film Reader''
External links
★
Greeneland: the world of Graham Greene
★
The Graham Greene Birthplace Trust
★
Graham Greene Writeup in the Literary Encyclopedia
★
Biography at Authors' Calendar website
★
A Review of Graham Greene's "Lawless Roads"
★
1989 audio interview of Norman Sherry, biographer of Graham Greene, RealAudio
★
The Paris Review Interview
★
CatholicAuthors Biography by Joseph Pearce
★
Find-A-Grave profile for Graham Greene