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Alec Waugh (1898–1981)

Author of Wines and Spirits

60+ Works 1,220 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Alec Waugh

Wines and Spirits (1968) 237 copies
Island in the Sun (1955) 175 copies, 1 review
Recipes: Wines and Spirits (1968) 132 copies, 1 review
The Loom of Youth (1917) 99 copies, 2 reviews
Hot Countries (1930) 84 copies, 1 review
A Spy in the Family (1970) 56 copies
The Fatal Gift (1973) 28 copies
Fuel for the Flame (2012) 26 copies
A Family of Islands (1964) 25 copies
A Year to Remember: A Reminiscence of 1931 (1969) 17 copies, 1 review
The Mule on the Minaret (1965) 17 copies
The Sugar Islands (2011) 13 copies, 1 review
My Place in the Bazaar (1963) 13 copies
Most Women (1931) 11 copies
Guy Renton (1976) 9 copies
Unclouded Summer (1974) 9 copies
The Balliols (2012) 8 copies
No Truce With Time (1975) 6 copies
Jill Somerset (1971) 6 copies
The sunlit Caribbean (1948) 5 copies
The Prisoners of Mainz (2009) 5 copies
Merchants of Wine (1957) 4 copies
Best Wine Last (1978) 4 copies
Brief Encounter (1975) 4 copies
Wheels within Wheels (1974) 3 copies
So Lovers Dream (1973) 2 copies
"... 'Sir," She Said (2012) 2 copies
Love in Conflict (1977) 2 copies
ALBIONS SØNNER 2 copies
Thirteen such years (2012) 2 copies
The Last Chukka 2 copies
Leap Before You Look (1932) 1 copy
Card Castle 1 copy
The intruder 1 copy
American Woman (1932) 1 copy
Married to a Spy (1976) 1 copy
The Lonely Unicorn (2014) 1 copy
Myself When Young (1923) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Pickwick Papers (1836) — Introduction, some editions — 10,365 copies, 151 reviews
Nicholas Nickleby (1839) — Introduction, some editions — 7,811 copies, 111 reviews
Bodies from the Library 4 (2021) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
The Best Horror Stories (1977) — Contributor — 28 copies
Wonderful London (1935) — Contributor — 22 copies
Best Legal Stories 2 (1970) — Contributor — 3 copies
A lawyer's notebook — Introduction, some editions — 1 copy
Argosy (UK) [Vol. IV No. 5, June 1943] — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (13) alcohol (12) beverages (12) biography (16) British (16) British literature (11) Caribbean (21) cocktails (15) cookbook (49) cookbooks (19) cooking (41) drinks (12) ebook (11) English literature (17) fiction (106) food (16) Foods of the World (33) history (15) liquor (11) literature (21) memoir (13) non-fiction (27) novel (24) spirits (13) Thailand (13) Time-Life (16) to-read (11) travel (32) West Indies (14) wine (58)

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Reviews

7 reviews
Alec Waugh (elder brother of Evelyn Waugh) wrote this semi-autobiographical and thinly disguised account of his teenaged student years at Sherbourne School in Dorset. In his next to last year, Alec and another boy were caught engaged in homosexual activity (later described as a "mild flirtation" and which his great-nephew, Alexander Waugh, opined was likely nothing more than kissing.) Nevertheless, Alec was expelled. In a fit of nostalgia and rebellion, Alec wrote The Loom of Youth over two show more months in early 1916 when he was 17 1/2 years old and training with the Army O.T.C.

The Loom of Youth was published by his father's firm in 1917 just as Alec was shipped to France in The Great War. (Happily, Arthur Waugh was a writer and publisher in his own right.) It was considered a sensational evocation of public school life. It was notable for its frank portrayal of homosexuality which Alec wrote was "the inevitable emotional consequences of a monastic herding together for eight months of the year thirteen year old children and eighteen year old adolescents." Although initially well reviewed, the book was later subject to a virulent letter campaign by public school masters and graduates decrying (and denying) its scandalous allegations. Alec Waugh went on to write novels (some of them quite racy), travel stories, magazine articles on wine and spirits and to briefly teach writing at a small college in Oklahoma.

How has the book aged over the past near century? Like other 'school days' books of the time, we are treated to tales of athletics, cribbing for papers and exams, ragging masters and tricks played on other students. (I admit to skipping through the passages on rugby and cricket -- completely inscrutable to this American-bred reader.) Other readers have likened the novel to 'Tom Brown's School Days.' However, the greater debt is likely to Arnold Lunn's 'The Harrovians' (1913), which is discussed in The Loom of Youth. (Lunn's papers contain correspondence with Alec in 1917-18). Usual school boy antics can give readers a 'step back in time' frisson. Waugh's novel transcends, delving deeper as his protagonist Gordon nears graduation. Here is a real grappling with the purpose of education and the student's own complicity in and responsibility for his academic growth.

To modern eyes, the 'shocking' portion dealing with Gordon's 'romance' with Morcombe is anything but. Alec in the 1955 preface admits to its don't-blink-or-you'll-miss-it quality. Readers looking for racy boy sex will be disappointed. Readers will be rewarded with a remarkably well written book, particularly by one so young.
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This is a wonderful book and a real delight for anyone interested in the 1930s, and the English artistic and literary scene of that era. Alec Waugh has a warm and chatty style, and it's no wonder that he was able to make friends easily and that many of these friendships were lifelong.

Alec Waugh wrote this book in the mid 1970s, towards the end of his life, and it is about the year he would most like to be able to live again - 1931. Looking back Alex decided that 1930 marked the end of the show more post-war period. 1932 marked the start of the pre-war period and 1931 was a no man's land. Despite describing it as a no man's land, it is clear that it was a remarkable year for Alex: a splendid mix of parties, love affairs, flirtations, travel, political upheaval and intrigue, time spent with his family, and so on. During the year Alec lived in New York, London, Villefranche (in the South of France), and writes in numerous homes and hotels including Easton Court Hotel, Chagford in Devon, which was run by the American Mrs Caroline Cobb, and her partner, Norman Webb, and where Evelyn Waugh wrote Brideshead Revisited. It was home to Patrick Balfour and numerous bohemian types in the 1930s and 1940s. It was also a year of firsts: Alec's first transatlantic telephone call; the year he became a member of the MCC; and Alec's first Royal garden party.

This charming memoir beautifully captures a bygone age and one that I find endlessly fascinating. I had to keep putting the book down as yet another notable individual entered Alec's life. Some I knew well, for example his brother Evelyn, and W Somerset Maugham, however the majority were new to me, and have inspired me to investigate some new literary names from the era (for example C.K. Scott Moncrieff, Theodora Benson and Betty Askwith, Sylvia Thompson, and Carl Van Vechten). It was not just writers that Alec describes, there's also friends, publishers, hoteliers and many more, all of whom made 1931 such a perfect year for him.
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This book was scandalous when it first came out, for it's frank portrayal sexual relationships between boys at a public school. To be honest I don't think the modern reader would even notice the incident. The book is interesting for it's depiction of brutal bullying and causal philistinism of the boys at a well regarded public school, (Alec Waugh was at Sherbourne - from which he was expelled for an inappropriate relationship with a younger boy). Much of the fury at the time came from show more teachers who could not believe that their charges could be so cynical about school life.

I thought the book was compelling for it's immediacy, I was surprised by some of the slang Waugh used, I would have dated some of it much later than 1916, however, it really is an awful book, horribly written, repetitive and clearly written by an author who didn't revise, or even remember what he had written a few chapters earlier. I can't imagine it would have been published if his father hadn't been running Chapman and Hall.

Oddly, I remember reading a much later book by Alec Waugh, "The Fatal Gift", which picked up some of the same themes, but was much better written.
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The author first saw the West Indies on a trip round the world in 1926 when his ship called in at Guadeloupe. Fifteen months later he returned for a long stay at Martinique; it was the beginning of a lifelong interest in these islands that were to provide him with the material for many books and articles.This book contains selected pieces from his writings, with the intention of compiling both a travelogue and a chronological commentary on the development of the islands during the last show more thirty years. He gives a background of the West Indies by detailing the colourful life of Martinique. He tells the story of a 17th-century Frenchman who joined the famous pirates of Tortuga and the history of the long bloodbath that preceeded the declaration of independence of Haiti. He also offers four character sketches, including three stories of black magic, and two sections deal with the individual charm and interest of each of the islands: Montserrat, Barbados, Anguilla, Trinidad, St. Vincent, Tortola, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Saba, Antigua, Dominica and Puerto Rico. show less

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Works
60
Also by
13
Members
1,220
Popularity
#21,043
Rating
3.9
Reviews
7
ISBNs
122
Languages
3

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