The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives Book Cover

The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives


A work of Non-fiction


Subgenres:

  • Biography,
  • 20th Century History,
  • Cold War Moscow
Buy from Amazon

This book is for you if you're into...

  • Biographies of brilliant men undone by their own choices
  • English society seen through artists, pilots, and spies
  • Stories of ambition and self-destruction in the twentieth century
Publisher Description

In The Fatal Englishman, his first work of nonfiction, Sebastian Faulks explores the lives of three remarkable men.

Each had the seeds of greatness; each was a beacon to his generation and left something of value behind; yet each one died tragically young.

Christopher Wood, only twenty-nine when he killed himself, was a painter who lived most of his short life in the beau monde of 1920s Paris, where his charm, good looks, and the dissolute life that followed them sometimes frustrated his ambition and achievement as an artist.

Richard Hillary was a WWII fighter pilot who wrote a classic account of his experiences, The Last Enemy, but died in a mysterious training accident while defying doctor’s orders to stay grounded after horrific burn injuries; he was twenty-three.

Jeremy Wolfenden, hailed by his contemporaries as the brightest Englishman of his generation, rejected the call of academia to become a hack journalist in Cold War Moscow.

A spy, alcoholic, and open homosexual at a time when such activity was still illegal, he died at the age of thirty-one, a victim of his own recklessness and of the peculiar pressures of his time.

Through the lives of these doomed young men, Faulks paints an oblique portrait of English society as it changed in the twentieth century, from the Victorian era to the modern world.

More Sebastian Faulks

Follow This Author

Sign up & we'll email you when a new title is available for pre-order or hits the bookshelf

Get Free & Discounted eBooks

Curated reads, irresistible prices—subscribe now

Add this book to your To Be Read list

Sign up to build your personal library

Archive This Book

Sign up to build your personal library