LSE Literary Weekend/ Royal Society of Literature biography event
Date: Sunday 1 March 2009
Time: 5.45pm
Venue: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speakers: Michael Holroyd, Patrick French
Chair: Anne Chisholm
When Patrick French was starting work on his first book, a life of the explorer Francis Younghusband, he wrote for advice to the Grand Old Man of British biography, Michael Holroyd. By return of post came an invitation to tea. What did they talk about at that first meeting, and what advice was Holroyd able to give? Is the art of biography instinctive, or can it be taught? And do biographers find their subjects, or do their subjects come looking for them? Michael Holroyd and Patrick French consider these, and other biographical conundrums, in a discussion chaired by Anne Chisholm.
Since the publication of his two-volume biography of Lytton Strachey in 1967 and 1968, Michael Holroyd has been widely regarded as one of the most innovative and influential of contemporary biographers. His other subjects include Augustus John, Bernard Shaw, and himself. Most recently, he published A Strange Eventful History: The Dramatic Lives of Ellen Terry, Henry Irving and Their Remarkable Families, described by John Carey in the Sunday Times as 'a fabulous cavalcade of a book, written with infectious verve and deep imaginative sympathy'. He is also a formidable campaigner on behalf of literature and writers, and is president of the Royal Society of Literature. In 2007 was knighted for his services to literature.
Patrick French's first book, a biography of Francis Younghusband (1994), won both the Somerset Maugham Award and the Royal Society of Literature Heinemann Award. This was followed by Liberty or Death: India's Journey to Independence and Division, which won him the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. In March 2008, he published The World Is What It Is, the authorized biography of Nobel Prize Winner V.S. Naipaul. Described by Michael Holroyd as 'the boldest biographical enterprise of recent times', it was selected as one of the ten best books of 2008 by the New York Times and the Washington Post. It will come out in paperback in April.
Anne Chisholm, chair of the Royal Society of Literature, is a biographer and critic who has also worked in publishing and journalism (she began her working life on Private Eye). Her first biography, Nancy Cunard (1979), won the Silver PEN Prize for non-fiction, and in 1992 her biography of Lord Beaverbrook, which she wrote jointly with her husband, Michael Davie, was runner up for the Hawthornden Prize. She has also written a life of Rumer Godden, and a study of the female survivors of Hiroshima. In April, Weidenfeld and Nicolson will publish her authorized biography of the Bloomsbury diarist Frances Partridge.
This event is supported by the Royal Society of Literature. This event follows on from Biography Writing: Lives in Context, and a break for tea for all the audience.
This is part of the LSE Space for Thought Literary Weekend, the LSE's first ever Literary Festival, celebrating the completion of the New Academic Building.
Ticket Information
One ticket will be allocated for both events in the Royal Society of Literature biography series Biography Writing: Lives in Context and A Tea-Time Tutorial. You can request a ticket via the Biography Writing: Lives in Context weblisting.
Media queries: please contact the Press Office if you would like to reserve a press seat or have a media query about this event, email pressoffice@lse.ac.uk