Michael de Larrabeiti

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Michael de Larrabeiti

Born: August 18, 1934
Lambeth, south London
Occupation(s): Novelist; also journalist
Influences: Robert Louis Stevenson, Cyril Connolly
Influenced: China Miéville; New Weird movement
Website: michaeldelarrabeiti.com

Michael de Larrabeiti, author, born 18 August in Lambeth, London in 1934, currently lives in Oxfordshire. He is best known for writing The Borrible Trilogy, which has been cited as an influence by writers in the New Weird movement.

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[edit] Early life

One of five children, he was mostly brought up in south London. His mother was of Irish descent and lived lived most of her life in the Lavender Hill area of London; his father was a Basque from Bilbao and was often absent. In 1939 he was evacuated to Arundel in West Sussex, before returning to London in 1940, only to be evacuated again to Askern, a mining village near Doncaster in Yorkshire, in the winter. At the end of the Second World War he returned to London and, after failing the eleven plus, was educated at Clapham Central Secondary School. The teachers he had here, often men who had returned from fighting in the war determined to make a better world, were a great influence on de Larrabeiti, something he would later fictionalise in Journal of a Sad Hermaphrodite.

[edit] Youth

After leaving school at sixteen, de Larrabeiti initially worked as a librarian at a public library on Magdalen Road in Earlsfield, south London. In 1952 he began attending Battersea Polytechnic with a view towards taking A-Levels and attending university. This ambition took nine years to fulfill, mainly because of economic reasons. During these period de Larrabeiti worked as many things, initially as a cinema projectionist in a 3D cinema in Festival Gardens, Battersea Park during the Festival of Britain. His experiences in the Gardens are recorded in A Rose Beyond the Thames. He later worked as a camera man in documentary films and as a travel guide in France and Morocco.

In 1959 he fell in with a group of Provençal shepherds and went with them on the transhumance, herding three thousand sheep from their winter pasture to summer pasture in the French Alps. He then taught English in Casablanca, and in 1961 was the photographer on Oxford University's Marco Polo Expedition, travelling four months overland on a motorcycle with Stanley Johnson and Tim Severin to Afghanistan and India. Between 1961 and 1965 he read French and English at Trinity College Dublin, from where he won a scholarship to the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, where he studied in 1965-66; he later began a DPhil at Keble College, Oxford which he later abandoned to take up full-time writing.

[edit] Writing career

De Larrabeiti continued to work in the travel and film businesses and, later, as a freelance contributor to the Sunday Times travel section, writing acclaimed travel essays. His books have also been critically well-received, with recent work being long-listed for the Booker Prize. 2006 saw the publication of his most recent novel, Princess Diana's Revenge; a collection of memoirs entitled Spots of Time is forthcoming in late 2006. His 1992 novel Journal of a Sad Hermaphrodite is also set to be republished, after having been out of print for over ten years.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] The Borrible Trilogy

[edit] Other works

[edit] External links

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