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Christopher Sykes (1) (1907–1986)

Author of Evelyn Waugh: A Biography

For other authors named Christopher Sykes, see the disambiguation page.

Christopher Sykes (1) has been aliased into Christopher Hugh Sykes.

15+ Works 405 Members 4 Reviews

Series

Works by Christopher Sykes

Works have been aliased into Christopher Hugh Sykes.

Evelyn Waugh: A Biography (1975) 153 copies, 2 reviews
Crossroads to Israel (1973) 57 copies
Orde Wingate, a biography (1961) 53 copies, 1 review
Four studies in loyalty (1946) 35 copies
Two Studies in Virtue (1953) 4 copies
A song of a shirt (1953) 4 copies
Dates & Parties (1955) 3 copies
Innocence and Design (1935) 2 copies

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into Christopher Hugh Sykes.

Stories Toto Told Me (1898) — Preface, some editions — 66 copies, 1 review
Fatal Fascination: A Choice of Crime (1968) — Contributor — 9 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Sykes, Christopher Hugh
Other names
Waughburton, Richard
Birthdate
1907-11-17
Date of death
1986-12-8
Gender
male
Education
Downside School, Somerset, England, UK
Christ Church College, Oxford
Organizations
BBC Radio
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
A comprehensive view of the mastermind of the British irregular warfare proponent. Wingate was not without flaws, and was an interesting character. Egocentric and jealous of his direct communications with God, he was hard to get along with, but was militarily useful in his efforts to wage irreguar warfare, primarily against the Japanese in the East. He died to soon.
½
I used to be able to read and enjoy fiction, mostly the ”classics”” from Hemmingway, Steinbeck, Graham Greene and of course, I read much that was written by the talented Waugh family. Novels that were often considered very important and generated profound discussions and critical essays examining their fictional characters, themes and supposed values. I found parts of Christopher Sykes wonderful biography of Evelyn Waugh mildly pretentious, but amusing – I scribbled penciled notes to show more myself on several paragraphs …”Why is fiction given such profound study and respect?”…In the closing chapter of this deeply researched and affectionate book Sykes wrote; ”..with the completion of the trilogy Evelyn’s career as a serious writer of fiction came to an end.”
I saw a contradiction in that sentence. Novels then, are all to be considered ‘serious’ – or just the novelist? Evelyn was hilarious, uproariously rude, pedantic, dogmatic, deeply religious, prudish and a true English eccentric. I enjoyed this portrait of his talented wit, courage and privileged life. It seems amazing that simultaneously there were so many great authors in England - craftsmen Evelyn called them, like himself – the entire Greene family, Connolly, J B Priestly and Somerset Maugham, Orwell, Morton, Betjeman … this wealth of art is the reason I suppose that fiction was and is given such respect.
But in closing his most enjoyable biography Christopher Sykes writes that ”Evelyn’s anti-reviewer goading may strike some readers as petty.” This reader was so stuck .. then the next sentence offered me reassurance that my questioning and doubting on the importance given to novels is not unique …”It is to do with the long-surviving notion (against which Jane Austen’s strictures have had no effect) that fiction is essentially trivial.
This is a wonderful life about a great character, written with style and structured to present interesting descriptions of both the author and his craftsmanship.
show less
1810 Evelyn Waugh: A Biography, by Christopher Sykes (read 18 Nov 1983) This is not a pretentious book. The author knew Waugh well. Waugh was born 28 Oct 1903 and died Easter Sunday, 10 April 1966. His life in the 1920's was not a laudatory one. All his life he drank too much. He was a character, and frequently difficult. All his books are discussed in the biography. This was a consistently readable book.
½
1945 Tormented Loyalty: The Story of a German Aristocrat Who Defied Hitler, by Christopher Sykes (read 27 Sep 1985) This tells of Adam von Trott zu Solz, who was born in 1909 and was executed 26 Aug 1944 as an aftermath of the attempt on Hitler's life on 20 July 1944. The book is not well-written but it was of considerable interest. I really should read a good book on the attempt on Hitler's life. Von Trott had a somewhat ambivalent career, though I am sure he consistently was against show more Hitler. He was a descendant of John Jay! Not an uninteresting story. show less
½

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Associated Authors

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Statistics

Works
15
Also by
2
Members
405
Popularity
#60,013
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
4
ISBNs
23

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