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Peter Mayle (1939–2018)

Author of A Year in Provence

66+ Works 20,851 Members 389 Reviews 47 Favorited

About the Author

Peter Mayle was born in Brighton, England on June 14, 1939. He began his career in advertising as a copywriter and rose to the executive ranks, but left advertising in 1975 to write educational books, including a series on sex education for children and young adults. His educational books including show more Where Did I Come From? and What's Happening to Me? His travel memoir, A Year in Provence, received the British Book Awards' Best Travel Book of the Year in 1990 and was adapted into a television mini-series. His other nonfiction books included Toujours Provence, Encore Provence, Provence A-Z, and French Lessons: Adventures with Knife, Fork and Corkscrew. His fiction books included The Marseille Caper, The Corsican Caper, and A Good Year, which was adapted into a 2006 film of the same name starring Russell Crowe and Marion Cotillard. Mayle died on January 18, 2018 at the age of 78. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:

This page was formerly split, presumably because the topics written about are very diverse and an assumption was made that they couldn't have been the same author. Works that were previously on #2 had been moved to #1, leaving #2 empty. All the works in the unknowns were related to works in #1, so I unsplit the page.

Image credit: Photo © 2006 Jean-Claude Simoen

Series

Works by Peter Mayle

A Year in Provence (2011) 6,055 copies, 118 reviews
Toujours Provence (1991) 2,553 copies, 24 reviews
Encore Provence (1999) 1,459 copies, 10 reviews
A Good Year (2004) 1,257 copies, 31 reviews
Hotel Pastis (1993) 1,248 copies, 18 reviews
Chasing Cézanne (1997) 974 copies, 16 reviews
A Dog's Life (1995) 820 copies, 17 reviews
Anything Considered (1996) 801 copies, 10 reviews
The Vintage Caper (2009) 713 copies, 43 reviews
Acquired Tastes (1993) 632 copies, 7 reviews
Where Did I Come From? (1973) 550 copies, 9 reviews
The Marseille Caper (2012) 380 copies, 23 reviews
"What's Happening to Me?" A Guide to Puberty (1975) — Author — 288 copies, 4 reviews
Provence A-Z (2006) 256 copies, 4 reviews
The Corsican Caper (2014) 207 copies, 6 reviews
The Diamond Caper (2015) 121 copies, 5 reviews
A Year in Provence / Toujours Provence (1992) 78 copies, 1 review
Expensive Habits (1991) 70 copies
Provence from the Air (1994) 57 copies
Why Are We Getting a Divorce? (1979) 51 copies, 8 reviews
How To Be A Pregnant Father (1977) 50 copies
The Provence Trilogy (1999) 49 copies
The Amazing Adventures of Chilly Billy (1980) 28 copies, 2 reviews
Baby Taming (1979) 27 copies
Provence (paintings) (1993) 21 copies
Sweet Dreams and Monsters (1986) 19 copies
Will I Go To Heaven? (1976) 9 copies, 1 review
Postcards from Summer (1996) 6 copies
3x Provence (2001) 3 copies
O Melhor Amigo do Homem (1998) 2 copies
法國盛宴 1 copy
Accept orice 1 copy
Der er ingen ende på Provence — Author — 1 copy
Willie's Away (1988) 1 copy
2004 1 copy
The Honeymoon Book (1983) 1 copy

Associated Works

A Good Year [2006 film] (2006) — Original book — 139 copies
Death by Pad Thai and Other Unforgettable Meals (2015) — Author, some editions — 84 copies, 1 review
France in Mind (2003) — Contributor — 36 copies, 1 review
Travelers' Tales PROVENCE : True Stories (2003) — Contributor — 29 copies

Tagged

20th century (51) autobiography (135) biography (175) British (55) cooking (63) dogs (69) essays (84) Europe (66) fiction (1,106) food (459) France (2,115) French (79) humor (423) literature (55) Mayle (67) memoir (832) mystery (219) non-fiction (914) novel (140) own (84) Peter Mayle (80) Provence (698) read (172) to-read (454) travel (1,641) travel literature (45) travel writing (91) travelogue (72) unread (67) wine (158)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Mayle, Peter
Birthdate
1939-06-14
Date of death
2018-01-18
Gender
male
Education
Brighton College
Occupations
advertising copywriter
non-fiction author
memoirist
novelist
travel writer
educational writer
Organizations
Papert Koenig, Londres, New York (Publicitaire, Directeur créatif, | 19 74)
Ogilvy and Mather, New York (Publicitaire, 19 61)
Shell Oil, Londres (Publiciatire, 1957)
Awards and honors
Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur (2002)
Short biography
Peter Mayle was born in Brighton, England. Following World War II, the family moved to Barbados, where his father served as an employee of the British Colonial Office. Mayle returned to England after leaving school at age 16. His first job in 1957 was as a trainee at Shell Oil's London office. He was more interested in advertising than oil, however, and by 1961 had became a copywriter at Shell's ad agency, Ogilvy & Mather, in New York City. Subsequently, he was hired by Papert Koenig Lois and returned to London to head up the creative team there. When the company had financial troubles in the mid-1960s, Mayle and a colleague bought the London operation. They developed the business and after five years, it was bought by BBDO. He then commuted between the USA and the UK as creative director. By 1974, Mayle had tired of advertising and transatlantic commuting, and quit to write full-time. He started off by writing educational books, including a series on sex education for children and young people. He also wrote, with illustrator Gray Jolliffe, a series of humorous books about the character Wicked Willie. His most significant career move probably was the decision to relocate to Ménerbes, a village in the Luberon region of southern France, in the late 1980s. There his plans to write a novel were overtaken by the events of life as an expatriate in his new environment. They provided the material for his 1989 book A Year in Provence, an international bestseller that became a media phenomenon. Many more books followed, which were translated in more than 20 languages. Mayle also wrote articles for magazines and newspapers. A Year in Provence was adapted into a highly popular British television series in 1993. Mayle had to move to Amagansett on Long Island, New York, to get away from the thousands of fans and sightseers who showed up at his home in Provence. He later returned to France and a home in Vaugines, also in the Luberon.  The French government awarded him the Legion of Honor in 2002, for "coopération et francophonie."
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Brighton, Sussex, England, UK
Places of residence
Lourmarin, Provence, France
Barbados
The Hamptons, New York, USA
Vaugines, Provence, France
London, England, UK
Ménerbes, Vaucluse, France
Place of death
Aix-en-Provence, Bouches-du-Rhône, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
Map Location
England, UK
Disambiguation notice
This page was formerly split, presumably because the topics written about are very diverse and an assumption was made that they couldn't have been the same author. Works that were previously on #2 had been moved to #1, leaving #2 empty. All the works in the unknowns were related to works in #1, so I unsplit the page.

Members

Reviews

430 reviews
Review UPDATED on re-read, Feb 2019

This is a re-read and I enjoyed it just as much as the first time I read it back in 2001. What a delightful diversion! Mayle's account of his and his wife's first year owning a house in Provence is entertaining, relaxing and inspiring. I love the way he accepts his status as an outsider but tries to understand and join in with the local traditions. A few of these characters are definitely memorable, including his plumber Menicucci, neighbors Faustin and show more Henriette, and the colorful Massot, who lives alone in a ramshackle mountain cabin with his trio of vicious dogs and feels proprietary about the national forest.

As they stumble from one catastrophe to another during the remodeling of their home, they still manage to find humor in most situations (almost anything is helped with another bottle of wine) and enjoy life in the surrounding villages. I loved his descriptions of the many extraordinary meals, the shops, markets and scenery. I could practically hear the bay of hounds on the hunt, smell the enticing aromas of butter, garlic and truffles, and feel the sunshine on my face. The book inspires me to enjoy life - good food, good wine and the siesta.

I’ve read many more of his books since first reading this one, including a couple of his novels. There are a few that I haven’t read and I’ll definitely add them to my TBR, and I may have to revisit some of those I’ve previously read. I will miss Mayle’s writing, now that he has passed away.
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A truly delicious feast of a book, Peter Mayle makes you want to run away to Provence right this minute. Simple, clean and vivid writing, coupled with a great heart. This guy has a wry, open-minded and elegant sense of humour along with a great eye for brush0stroke nuances that sketch an entire character for you deftly. A must-read for travel and food buffs.
Mayle's Hotel Pastis is the perfect treat when one is wanting something light, but not unintelligent or poorly written. Let's think of it as the thinking reader's bon-bon. Light and sparkling as a glass of Dom Perignon ( not a little of which is quaffed in the novel), Mayle spins an engaging story of middle age, top of his game ad exe who is tired of the racquet. Simon chucks it all and with the help of his natty aide de camp, Ernest and his savvy new girlfriend Nicole, he restores an old show more police station in Provence with the intention of opening a small hotel. Ah, that life was that simple. Before long he is caught up in the not quiet life of the countryside. He finds himself fending of Mafia types, involved in retrieving a kidnapping victim and buffeting an expat neighbor's attempts to discredit the hotel. Not to mention there is a bank robbery with some of the most delightful petty criminals in fiction. Witty dialogue, wry insights, pleasing descriptions of setting, marvelously funny characters. Much fun. show less
Given that encore means "again" and toujours means "forever" I understandably mistook this book to be the second in the series, rather than the third, and so I read them out of order.

I think no one will be terribly surprised that this is a watered-down version of A Year in Provence. It is less a memoir and more a collection of essays. I was hoping for more sketches of village characters and anecdotes about gardening, food, and local color. There are some of those, but mostly this reads like show more a travel magazine assignment or a series of blog posts.

I was put off by an oddly sexist outburst in the middle of an otherwise inoffensive chapter on corkscrews and knives in which Mayle starts effectively thinking out loud on the page about whatever in the world a laaaaaady need with a knife?

What would she do with an accessory knife? Emergency manicures? Opening love letters? Puncturing a gentleman's reputation?


(I could almost hear him saying, in a sort of Cary Grant voice, while typing, "A lady with a knife? Pfft! Preposterous!" Of course, in this fantasy a female costar -- preferably playing the role of his editor -- smacks him up the backside of the head.) For the record, Mr. Mayle, women use knives for the same things men do, which in this day and age is restricted mainly to opening packages.

Outside of that silly, out-of-character bit of anachronistic misogyny, the book is pleasant enough. It's especially good reading before you go to bed -- not because it's necessarily soporific, but because it is soothing.
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Statistics

Works
66
Also by
17
Members
20,851
Popularity
#1,037
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
389
ISBNs
750
Languages
22
Favorited
47

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