Difference between revisions of "Colin Spencer"
Ross Burgess (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "Colin Spencer in 2011'''Colin Spencer''' (born 1933) is a writer and artist. He has produced novels, cookery books and...") |
Ross Burgess (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
Colin Spencer was born in [[Thornton Heath]], South London, went to school in [[Brighton]], and studied at Brighton Art College. He spent his period of National Service as a pacifist in the Royal Army Medical Corps in war-ravaged Hamburg where he treated soldiers who had contracted venereal disease.<ref>[http://colinspencer.co.uk/biog.html Colin Spencer: Biography]</ref>He has subsequently lived in London, Vienna, Athens, on the Greek island of Lesbos, and latterly in [[East Sussex]]. He has twice been married and has one son and two grandsons. | Colin Spencer was born in [[Thornton Heath]], South London, went to school in [[Brighton]], and studied at Brighton Art College. He spent his period of National Service as a pacifist in the Royal Army Medical Corps in war-ravaged Hamburg where he treated soldiers who had contracted venereal disease.<ref>[http://colinspencer.co.uk/biog.html Colin Spencer: Biography]</ref>He has subsequently lived in London, Vienna, Athens, on the Greek island of Lesbos, and latterly in [[East Sussex]]. He has twice been married and has one son and two grandsons. | ||
+ | |||
+ | His published works include ''British Food'', ''[[Homosexuality: A History]]'', and novels including ''Panic'', ''Asylum'', and the novel sequence ''Generation''. | ||
The first volume of his planned three-part autobiography was been published by Quartet Books, in April 2013. ''Backing into Light: My Father's Son'' tells the story of the first three decades of his eventful life through his wartime boyhood dominated by his raucous, womanising but irrepressible father, to his first successes in the 50s and 60s as an artist, novelist and playwright. They were years which saw ardent affairs with both women and men, a stormy marriage, the birth of a son, and a traumatic divorce. The book has been described as “full of clear-eyed observation and thoughtful reflection, as well as comic incident … unflinchingly honest and exuberantly entertaining,”<ref>review by Sebastian Wayneflete, ''Fitzrovia News'', Issue 129 Summer 2013</ref> while ''The Spectator'' finds it “a remarkable autobiography which subverts everything you thought you knew about love and life.” <ref>review by Duncan Fallowell, ''The Spectator'', 22 June 2013</ref> | The first volume of his planned three-part autobiography was been published by Quartet Books, in April 2013. ''Backing into Light: My Father's Son'' tells the story of the first three decades of his eventful life through his wartime boyhood dominated by his raucous, womanising but irrepressible father, to his first successes in the 50s and 60s as an artist, novelist and playwright. They were years which saw ardent affairs with both women and men, a stormy marriage, the birth of a son, and a traumatic divorce. The book has been described as “full of clear-eyed observation and thoughtful reflection, as well as comic incident … unflinchingly honest and exuberantly entertaining,”<ref>review by Sebastian Wayneflete, ''Fitzrovia News'', Issue 129 Summer 2013</ref> while ''The Spectator'' finds it “a remarkable autobiography which subverts everything you thought you knew about love and life.” <ref>review by Duncan Fallowell, ''The Spectator'', 22 June 2013</ref> |
Revision as of 10:46, 10 August 2016
Colin Spencer (born 1933) is a writer and artist. He has produced novels, cookery books and stage and television plays. His visual work includes drawings. paintings, and magazine and newspaper illustrations.Colin Spencer was born in Thornton Heath, South London, went to school in Brighton, and studied at Brighton Art College. He spent his period of National Service as a pacifist in the Royal Army Medical Corps in war-ravaged Hamburg where he treated soldiers who had contracted venereal disease.[1]He has subsequently lived in London, Vienna, Athens, on the Greek island of Lesbos, and latterly in East Sussex. He has twice been married and has one son and two grandsons.
His published works include British Food, Homosexuality: A History, and novels including Panic, Asylum, and the novel sequence Generation.
The first volume of his planned three-part autobiography was been published by Quartet Books, in April 2013. Backing into Light: My Father's Son tells the story of the first three decades of his eventful life through his wartime boyhood dominated by his raucous, womanising but irrepressible father, to his first successes in the 50s and 60s as an artist, novelist and playwright. They were years which saw ardent affairs with both women and men, a stormy marriage, the birth of a son, and a traumatic divorce. The book has been described as “full of clear-eyed observation and thoughtful reflection, as well as comic incident … unflinchingly honest and exuberantly entertaining,”[2] while The Spectator finds it “a remarkable autobiography which subverts everything you thought you knew about love and life.” [3]
External links
References
- This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.
- ↑ Colin Spencer: Biography
- ↑ review by Sebastian Wayneflete, Fitzrovia News, Issue 129 Summer 2013
- ↑ review by Duncan Fallowell, The Spectator, 22 June 2013