- Messages
- 6,099
- Location
- Acton, Massachusetts
In this Sunday's New York Times Book Review they reviewed a new biography about Denys Finch Hatton by Sara Wheeler called Too Close To The Sun. A comically terrible title, in my opinion, but the book sounds interesting and I certainly admire the subject matter.
Here are some interesting things from Florence William's review. "A thorough aristocrat, he liked drinking Chateau d'Yquem and wore a brown velvet smoking jacket when he wasn't in the bush shooting bongo and stalking dik-dik. But there was something solid in him... He was the Last Edwardian Male." [title caps are hers.]
I like the concept of him as "the Last Edwardian..." She sees him as a character poised at the transition between both ages; perhaps "the Last Edwardian..." and a bit of the first modern; a truly restless soul with the heart of a conservationist uncharacteristic for his day, as well as some of his more Bohemian, and well known, tendencies.
She says this of his affair with Karen Blixen, "Together the lovers read books, listened to Rachmaninoff and picnicked under the African skies." Not a bad setting for an iconic relationship.
When he was 44, and after having left Blixen for a younger woman, Denys fell from the sky and was killed while scouting elephant. With his family monies dwindling and The Edwardian world he knew in Europe now years behind him.
What's interesting about Denys and what may be the root of his appeal even now, is that he isn't known for his accomplishments; he never wrote a book or rose to a political position. Instead, he is known for how he lived and how he loved, rendered beautifully through the Aegis of Karen Blixen's talented prose.
An interesting figure in early 20th century life and the book sounds interesting as well. Men, and women, like Blixen, George Outram, & Philip Percival were an interesting lot; from comfortable backgrounds they went to Africa to measure themselves against the absolute and unforgiving nature of wilderness. Some measured up and others did not. Mr. Hatton certainly did.
Too Close To The Sun; The Audacious Life and Times of Denys Finch Hatton.
So, any opinions on Mr. Hatton? Has anyone read the book? Any other pertinent comments?
Here are some interesting things from Florence William's review. "A thorough aristocrat, he liked drinking Chateau d'Yquem and wore a brown velvet smoking jacket when he wasn't in the bush shooting bongo and stalking dik-dik. But there was something solid in him... He was the Last Edwardian Male." [title caps are hers.]
I like the concept of him as "the Last Edwardian..." She sees him as a character poised at the transition between both ages; perhaps "the Last Edwardian..." and a bit of the first modern; a truly restless soul with the heart of a conservationist uncharacteristic for his day, as well as some of his more Bohemian, and well known, tendencies.
She says this of his affair with Karen Blixen, "Together the lovers read books, listened to Rachmaninoff and picnicked under the African skies." Not a bad setting for an iconic relationship.
When he was 44, and after having left Blixen for a younger woman, Denys fell from the sky and was killed while scouting elephant. With his family monies dwindling and The Edwardian world he knew in Europe now years behind him.
What's interesting about Denys and what may be the root of his appeal even now, is that he isn't known for his accomplishments; he never wrote a book or rose to a political position. Instead, he is known for how he lived and how he loved, rendered beautifully through the Aegis of Karen Blixen's talented prose.
An interesting figure in early 20th century life and the book sounds interesting as well. Men, and women, like Blixen, George Outram, & Philip Percival were an interesting lot; from comfortable backgrounds they went to Africa to measure themselves against the absolute and unforgiving nature of wilderness. Some measured up and others did not. Mr. Hatton certainly did.
Too Close To The Sun; The Audacious Life and Times of Denys Finch Hatton.
So, any opinions on Mr. Hatton? Has anyone read the book? Any other pertinent comments?