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more I spent time in the world of Patrick
O'Brian, the more I realized—at least
subconsciously—that there was something
funny going on. To justify his reticence
to talk about himself, O'Brian argued that
readers didn't need to know anything about
Homer to appreciate Homer. I did not
buy this argument. (Oh, wouldn't it
be nice to know more about Homer! And look
at our fascination with the identity of Shakespeare.)
If Homer lived today and particularly if he
toured America promoting his books, we would
know plenty about him. But O'Brian insisted
that no one ask personal questions and no
one look into his background.
I thought that it would be something of a
travesty if the author—who I consider
one of the best fiction writers and great
men of letters of the last half century—died
without our knowing anything about him and
the background that produced the profoundly
moving Aubrey-Maturin novels. So, I
flew to Ireland to learn about Patrick O'Brian.
At that time, I had no idea that he was not
who he said he was. But I soon found
out. In a teashop in the village of
Balinasloe, in western Ireland, I met a woman
who was of the O'Brian clan. She steered
me to a brother-in-law. “Patrick
O'Brian?” he said. “You've
come to the right place. I buried him
myself.” At the tombstone of the
only possible Patrick O'Brian who fit the
details the author had given, I realized that
the author, who was alive and writing in the
south of France, was not who he claimed to
be. For the better part of three years,
I would chase down the details of the life
of this enigmatic author. The fascinating
and tortuous trail took me not just to Ireland,
but England, Wales, France, Germany, Canada,
and Australia in search of the truth.
Born Richard Russ, O'Brian changed his name
in 1945 after serving in British intelligence
during WW II, thus burying a failed marriage
and abandoning a precocious career as a novelist.
O'Brian went on to write arguably the most
profound fiction about male friendship in
the English language. He was also a
biographer of Picasso and Joseph Banks and
the translator of Simone de Beauvoir's later
work.
Patrick O'Brian: A Life Revealed
details the life of one of the more fascinating
literary figures of the twentieth century.
Published in
the United States by Henry Holt and in the
United Kingdom by Sceptre, an imprint of Hodder
Headline, 2000; serialized in the Daily
Telegraph. Published in Germany
by Ullstein Maritim, 2004.

“Dean King's biography reveals in fascinating
detail that the private man behind the novels
was no less of a magician than the author
who created them. This is a truly remarkable
book which uncovers the secrets of a professionally
secretive man.” – John
Bayley
“King has performed a prodigy of detective
research in tracking down the details of Patrick
O'Brian's real life. Much more to the
point, however, Mr. King has painted a fascinating,
compassionate, honest portrait of a complex
and difficult man who was also a consummate
writer.” – Wolcott
Gibbs Jr.
“Dean King has done a magnificent job
here, proving himself an able sleuth, putting
real flesh on this immensely gifted, complex–difficult,
even–storyteller. [An] absorbing
biography.” – Jay Parini.
“A model of how these things should
be: sceptical, generous and almost as
well informed as the master himself.”
– Daily Telegraph ,
Books of the Year
“King casts a sober eye but not a cold
heart on this secretive writer whose …
devotees should rejoice at this account of
his life, written with appreciative balance,
rich with literary insight…. His analysis
is crisp and engaging…. O'Brian endures
and captivates readers for reasons this biography
sets forth lucidly…. King does his
memory justice.” – L.A.
Times
“A worthy…. generous portrait
by a true believer that sets much of the record
straight.” – New
York Times Book Review
“King's diligent research yields pleasing
details … O'Brian addicts will be grateful
for King's efforts.” – The
New Yorker
“The full story…brought out
with finesse.” – Smithsonian
“[In] this well-written and researched
book ... King has been conscientious, providing
just the right balance of detail. King
is well qualified to act the biographer to
O'Brian, and has, despite the lack of help
from his subject, written an excellent book.
It will stand for some time as the source
for the life of this talented, complex man.”
– T.L.S.
“It is a tribute to King's pertinacity
and the admirable fairness of his approach
that he has succeeded in producing a fascinating
and rewarding study of a uniquely complex
man.” – Nikolai Tolstoy,
Literary Review
“A model enquiry into a life concealed….
Among King's many biographical triumphs is
to have firmly anchored the central characters
of that series in O'Brian's life.” – Sunday
Telegraph
“King's telling of [O'Brian's] puzzling
tale is decent, fair and extremely thorough.” – Jan
Morris, The Observer
“Diligently researched, informative,
and ... persuasive.” – Spectator
“Peter's Picks”: “Absorbing,
fascinating.”
– Peter Guttridge, BBC1 Amazon
Editors' Selection.
“Illuminating, A-” – Entertainment
Weekly , Editor's Choice
“King's writing is really first-rate.”
(four out of four stars)
– Detroit Free Press
Barry Forshaw, Amazon UK: “A
superlative celebration of one of the most
amazing bodies of fiction produced in the
20th century. Again and again, King
performs the key function of a literary biographer:
he inspires in the reader an intense
desire to return to his subject's work, armed
with a host of new insights… Most
of all, though, it's the communication of
the biographer's enthusiasm for his subject
that leaps off the page:
Suddenly, it became apparent that while
O'Brian may or may not have surpassed Forester
in sea action, he had created great novels
that did not look quite like anything that
had come before. His evocation of
Nelson's Royal Navy was an escapist world
as appealing as J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle
Earth, as culturally rich as William Faulkner's
Yoknapatawpha County, and as intriguingly
ritualistic as Umberto Eco's medieval monastery
in The Name of the Rose.
In this setting, almost flawlessly sustained
in the more than five-thousand-page opus,
O'Brian had examined his two primary themes,
love and friendship, from myriad angles,
with extraordinary lucidity and a stylistic
range to rival the best novelists. Critics
no longer compared him to C. S. Forester
but to Jane Austen, Leo Tolstoy, Marcel
Proust and Homer.”
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