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Ivor Brown (1891–1974)

Author of Shakespeare

81+ Works 768 Members 5 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Photo credit: Howard Coster

Series

Works by Ivor Brown

Shakespeare (1951) 220 copies
A Book of England (1958) 47 copies
Chosen Words (1979) 47 copies, 1 review
Shakespeare in his time (1976) 23 copies
Ivor Brown's Book of Words (1947) 23 copies
Shakespeare and his world (1964) 18 copies, 1 review
I Give You My Word (1977) 15 copies
A Book of London (1961) 15 copies
A word in your ear (1944) 15 copies
Jane Austen and Her World (1966) 12 copies
Winter in London (1951) 12 copies
The heart of England (1935) 12 copies
Dickens and His World (1970) 12 copies
Just another word (1943) 10 copies
Dickens in his time (1965) 10 copies
Say the Word 9 copies
Shaw in his time (1979) 9 copies
No Idle Words (1948) 7 copies
Having the last word (1950) 7 copies
I break my word (1951) 7 copies
A ring of words (1972) 6 copies
W. Somerset Maugham (1970) 6 copies, 1 review
The Way of My World (1954) 6 copies
Look At Theatres (1969) 6 copies
H. G. Wells (1972) 6 copies, 1 review
Random Words (1971) 5 copies
Words on the Level (1973) 5 copies
Word for word. An encyclopaedia of beer (1953) 5 copies, 1 review
Words in our time (1974) 5 copies
The Bedside 'Guardian' 2 (1953) — Editor — 5 copies
J.B. Priestley (1964) 4 copies
A charm of names (1972) 4 copies
Words in season (1974) 4 copies
Theatre 1955-6 4 copies
The Bedside Guardian (1952) 4 copies
Old and young (1971) 3 copies
Years of plenty, (2012) 3 copies
Parody Party (1970) — Author — 3 copies
THE BEDSIDE GUARDIAN 4. (1955) 3 copies
THE BEDSIDE GUARDIAN -3 (1954) — Editor — 3 copies
A Book Of Marriage (2011) 3 copies
A rhapsody of words (1969) 3 copies
Stately Homes in Colour (1961) 2 copies
DR. JOHNSON AND HIS WORLD (1965) 2 copies
About antiques (1973) 1 copy
Ivor Brown 1 copy

Associated Works

Death of a Salesman [critical edition] (1967) — Contributor — 1,102 copies, 8 reviews
A Book of English Essays (1942) — Contributor — 251 copies, 2 reviews
Churchill: By His Contemporaries (1953) — Contributor — 75 copies
The National Trust: A Record of Fifty Years' Achievement (1945) — Contributor — 16 copies
Essays in labour history (1967) — Contributor — 9 copies
British and American Essays, 1905-1956 (1959) — Contributor — 7 copies
Legacy of England (1935) — Author — 6 copies
All in the game (1952) — Introduction, some editions — 2 copies
Essays of the year (1929-1930) (1930) — Contributor — 1 copy

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Reviews

5 reviews
Ivor Brown (1891 - 1974) was a prominent British drama critic who published a wide range of books on the theatre, poetry, and Shakespeare. Between 1925 and 1935, he had reviewed quite a number of Somerset Maugham's plays for two leading periodicals (acc. to Charles Sanders' W. Somerset Maugham: Annotated Bibliography of Writings). Thus, in 1970, when no reputable biography of Maugham had yet emerged, he was a reasonable choice for a contribution about the author for the International show more Profiles series of books. Now that a number of detailed biographies on Somerset Maugham are available, this work will likely get little attention. It does offer in very concise form a survey of Maugham's life and his literary contributions, along with photographs that have never been reprinted elsewhere in book form. Overall, I find myself ambivalent about the book.

This work consists of five chapters. Chapter 1, "The Life," is a serviceable but brief (12 page) biography that summarizes the life and accomplishments of the author. While containing no obvious errors, it offers no more (and perhaps less) than one might find at Wikipedia or other online sources. Chapter 2 "The Writer" focuses on the historical context of his fiction. I enjoyed and learned from the brief account of the literary mileu in which Maugham was writing. Of particular note is how many of the writers who were highly regarded during Maugham's career (including Meredith, Galsworthy, Wells, and Kipling) are seldom read today. However, I was surprised at how little attention was given in this book to the content of Maugham's work, and the fact that his travel writing and other non-fiction was ignored.

Chapter 3, "The Playwright" deals with Maugham's career writing for the theatre. Knowing relatively little about drama, I learned from this chapter as well. I enjoyed Ivor Brown's sardonic comments about how the pretensions of capital- D "Drama" evolved from "plays," a trend resisted by Maugham (who saw the theatre as a form of entertainment, not education). One excellent feature of this chapter is the included photographs of the characters on stage for each of a number of the plays. On some pages, the author juxtaposed photos of a single play or film as shown in different productions over the years. Thus, on one page we can see "Rain" in the 1928 version with Glora Swanson in the leading role, the 1932 version starring Joan Crawford, and the 1953 film with Rita Hayworth.

Chapters 4 and 5 are respectively entitled "Belief and Opinion" and "The Man". These are the weakest chapters in the book. Mr. Brown engages in too much amateur psychologizing, seeking to explain Somerset Maugham's personality by reference to his early life, and trying to read his fiction as autobiographical. I found his attempts at analysis pretentious and even arrogant (he judges Maugham as wretched and miserable from his appearance in photographs and paintings; he informs us that in Maugham, "emotional disturbance" was a lifelong condition; and so on). What's more, he informs us about Mr. Maugham's sexuality (which in 1970 was not widely known). The final pages of the book are of no value; they contain an extremely brief "Summary of Events" that fails to mention Maugham's literary accomplishments, a haphazard list of his books and plays, and a minuscule bibliography.

Whether the few positive elements of this small work balance the negative ones will be a matter of opinion. There are more definitive sources of information available, although the photographs herein are rather good.
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More hagiography than biography, but some beautifully written passages.
For young people. I skimmed for Children's Books themed discussion Nov. 2020 but don't find it worthy of reading or sharing there.
Doof, frisgig, fribble, muffishness, oddling, stolchy and lots more but not componentised or monetised or ambiant findability.

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Works
81
Also by
9
Members
768
Popularity
#33,143
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
53
Languages
1
Favorited
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