AUTHORS
Alcott,
Louisa May
Alighieri,
Dante
Andersen,
Hans Christian
Austen,
Jane
Balzac,
Honore de
Barrie,
James M.
Bierce,
Ambrose
Blake,
William
Bronte,
Emily
Bronte,
Charlotte
Bronte,
Anne
Bulfinch,
Thomas
Burnett,
Francis Hodgson
Burroughs,
Edgar Rice
Byron,
Lord George Gordon
Carroll,
Lewis
Cervantes,
Miguel de
Chaucer,
Geoffrey
Chekhov,
Anton
Chesterton,
Gilbert Keith
Christie,
Agatha
Coleridge,
Samuel Taylor
Conrad,
Joseph
Cooper,
James Fenimore
Crane,
Stephen
Darwin,
Charles
Defoe,
Daniel
Dickens,
Charles
Dickinson,
Emily
Donne,
John
Dostoevsky,
Fyodor
Douglass,
Frederick
Doyle,
Arthur Conan
Dumas,
Alexandre
Eliot,
George
Emerson,
Ralph Waldo
Fitzgerald,
F. Scott
Forster,
E.M.
Frost,
Robert
Grahame,
Kenneth
Hardy,
Thomas
Hawthorne,
Nathaniel
Henry,
O
Hesse,
Hermann
Homer
Hugo,
Victor
Huxley,
Aldous
Irving,
Washington
James,
Henry
Joyce,
James
Keats,
John
Kipling,
Rudyard
Lamb,
Charles
Lawrence,
D.H.
Leroux,
Gaston
London,
Jack
Longfellow,
Henry Wadsworth
Machiavelli,
Niccolo
Maupassant,
Guy de
Melville,
Herman
Milton,
John
Montgomery,
Lucy Maud
More,
Thomas
Orwell,
George
Poe,
Edgar Allan
Scott,
Sir Walter
Shakespeare,
William
Shaw,
George Bernard
Shelley,
Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley,
Percy Bysshe
Sinclair,
Upton
Smith,
Adam
Sophocles
Stevenson,
Robert Louis
Stoker,
Bram
Stowe,
Harriet Beecher
Swift,
Jonathan
Tennyson,
Lord Alfred
Thoreau,
Henry David
Tolstoy,
Leo
Twain,
Mark
Tzu,
Sun
Verne,
Jules
Virgil
Voltaire,
Francois-Marie Arouet
Wells, Herbert George
Wharton,
Edith
Wilde,
Oscar
Woolf,
Virginia
Wordsworth,
William
Yeats,
William Butler
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Aldous Huxley Biography
English novelist and critic,
grandson of the prominent biologist T.H. Huxley (see further
below) and brother of Julian Huxley, who also was a biologist.
Aldous Huxley's production was wide. Besides novels he published
travel books, histories, poems, plays, and essays on philosophy,
arts, sociology, religion and morals. Among Huxley's best known
novels is BRAVE NEW WORLD, which is one of the classical works of
science fiction along with George Orwell's Nineteen-Eighty-Four.
The drug "soma", mentioned in the story, comes from
Thomas More's Utopia. In his later years Huxley wrote two books
about mind-altering drugs.
Aldous Huxley was born in Godalming, Surrey into a well-to-do
upper-middle-class family. On his mother's side he was related to
Matthew Arnold, the great British humanist, and his father,
Leonard Huxley, was a biographer, editor, and poet. He first
studied at Eton College, Berkshire (1908-13). When Huxley was
fourteen his mother died. At the age of 16 Huxley suffered an
attack of keratitis punctata and became for a period of about 18
months totally blind. By using special glasses and one eye
recovered sufficiently he was able to read and he also learned
braille. Despite a condition of near-blindness, Huxley continued
his studies at Balliol College, Oxford (1913-15), receiving his
B.A. in English in 1916. Unable to pursue his chosen career as a
scientist - or fight in World War on the front - Huxley turned to
writing. He worked for the War Office in London in 1917, and
taught briefly at Eton College and Repton. His first collection of
poetry appeared in 1916 and two more volumes followed by 1920. In
1919-20 he was member of the editorial staff of Athenaeum under
Middleton Murray, Katherine Mansfield's husband. Huxley wrote
biographical and architectural articles and reviews of fiction,
drama music and art.
In 1920-21 Huxley was drama a critic for Westminster Gazette, an
assistant at the Chelsea Book Club and worked for Condé Nast
Publications (1922). His first novel, CROME YELLOW (1921), a witty
criticism of society, appeared in 1921. Huxley's style, a
combination of brilliant dialogue, cynicism, and social criticism,
made him one of the most fashionable literary figures of the
decade. He was a friend of Lady Ottoline Morrell and the
Bloomsbury group, which included such writers as Virginia Woolf,
Clive Bell, Lytton Strachey, and E.M. Forster. In eight years he
published a dozen books, among them POINT COUNTER POINT (1928), in
which the numerous characters, among them D.H. Lawrence, Murray,
Mansfield, and the author himself, are compared to instruments in
an orchestra, and each character plays his separate portion of
Huxley's vision of life. Later these early works, mostly satirical
comments on contemporary events, have been criticized for their
rather one-dimensional characters, which the author used as a
mouthpiece to say 'almost everything about almost anything' - as
Huxley once described the nature of the essay. In DO WHAT YOU WILL
(1929) Huxley predicts that Karl Marx's Proletariat becomes
"a bourgeoisie with oily instead of inky fingers",
compares the first motion picture in which spoken dialogue is
heard, 'The Jazz Singer', to a "brimming bowl of
hog-wash", and sees that at out time "monotheism has
lost the value which circumstances once gave it. It lacks
political utility, and to the individual it is a poison." In
the essay 'Fashions on Love' he defends D.H. Lawrence's doctrine
of the 'natural love' but rejects "the sexual impulse, which
now spends itself purposelessly..."
During the 1920s Huxley formed a close friendship with D.H.
Lawrence with whom he traveled in Italy and France. For most of
the 1920s Huxley lived in Italy. In the 1930s he moved to Sanary,
near Toulon, where he wrote Brave New World, a dark vision of a
highly technological society of the future. In it Huxley turned
upside down H.G. Wells' scientific optimism. Developments in
sciences and cultural changes in his own time inspired much of
imagination - such as mass production, which revolutionized
industry, air travel, glamorized by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia
Earhart, behaviorist psychology, and explorations in genetics.
Margaret Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa (1928) also was among the
books he read for the novel. In the book Huxley answered to fears
of hopes of wide variety of his readers and in its first year it
sold a total of twenty-eight thousand copies in England and in the
United States, and enjoyed respectable sales throughout the
remainder of the century.
In the1930s Huxley was deeply concerned with the Peace Pledge
Union. He moved in 1937 with the guru-figure Gerald Heard to the
United States, believing that the Californian climate would help
his eyesight, a constant burden. After this turning point in his
life, Huxley abandoned pure fictional writing and chose the essay
as the vehicle for expressing his ideas. He also wrote screenplays
in collaboration with Christopher Isherwood for film studios, but
did not gain success in this field. Among their unproduced film
treatments was Jacob's Hands, a story about healing powers and
disappointment in love. Huxley also was a regular contributor to
Vedanta and the West, the magazine Isherwood edited while a
discipline of Swami Prabhavananda.
BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISED appeared in 1958. He stated that in
writing Brave New World he had failed to recognize the ominous
potential of nuclear fission, "for the possibilities of
atomic energy had been a popular topic of conversation for years
before the book was written." He believed that individual
freedom was much closer to extinction than he had imagined.
Huxley's other later works include THE DEVILS OF LOUDON (1952),
depicting mass-hysteria and exorcism in the 17th-century France.
ISLAND (1962) was an utopian novel and a return to the territory
of Brave New World, in which a journalist shipwrecks on Pala, the
fabled island, and discovers there a kind and happy people. But
the earthly paradise is not immune to the harsh realities of oil
policy. BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISITED (1959) was a sequel to his
classic novel. Huxley compared the predictions of his earlier work
with subsequent developments in science and society. In 1963
appeared LITERATURE AND SCIENCE, a collection of essays.
In 1954 Huxley published an influential study of consciousness
expansion through mescaline, THE DOORS OF PERCEPTION (see Jim
Morrison) and became later a guru among Californian hippies'. He
also started to use LSD and showed interest in Hindu philosophy.
In 1961 Huxley suffered a severe loss when his house and his
papers were totally destroyed in a bush-fire. Little survived
apart from the manuscript of Island. Huxley died in Los Angeles on
November 22, 1963. In the media news of his death were
overshadowed by the assassination of President Kennedy. Huxley was
married twice. In 1919 he married Maria Nys, a Belgian, who died
1956. They had one son. In 1956 he married the violinist and
psychotherapist Laura Archera.
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