Julian MacLaren-Ross

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Julian MacLaren-Ross (July 1912 - November 1964) was British novelist. His reputation as a dandy in post-war London bohemia to some extent exceeds the actual stature of his recognised works. His turbulent life and pivotal role in the Fitzrovian milieu has ensured iconic status and a constant interest in his work. Debt, alcoholism and a love of debauched living all featured heavily in his life. His biographer referred to him as the "mediocre caretaker of his own immense talent".

Born James McLaren Ross in South Norwood, London in 1912, his father John Lambden Ross was of mixed Scottish and Cuban blood, and his mother, from an Anglo-Indian family, was described as "a magnificent Indian lady and the obvious source of his male beauty". MacLaren-Ross was largely educated in the South of France, though his charming memoir The Weeping and the Laughter (1953) principally concerns his boyhood in a Bournemouth suburb. In 1943 he was discharged from the army, having been found at home with a female acquaintance while AWOL.

Aside from his principal novels, MacLaren-Ross was a frequent contributor to literary journals of the time, such as the London Magazine and Horizon. He was known to be a sympathiser of the British Labour Party and though he never dealt with explicitly political themes in his stories, the backdrop of inter and post-war social strife was always intimated.

MacLaren Ross was fictionalised as novelist X. Trapnel in Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time and was the subject of a 2003 biography Fear and Loathing in Fitzrovia by Paul Willetts (Dewi Lewis Publishing).

[edit] Works

  • The Stuff to Give the Troops, Jonathan Cape (1944)
  • Better than a Kick in the Pants, Lawson & Dunn, jointly with the Hyperion Press (1945)
  • Bitten by the Tarantula, Allan Wingate (1946)
  • The Nine Men of Soho, Allan Wingate (1946)
  • Of Love and Hunger, Allan Wingate (1947)
  • The Weeping and the Laughter, Rupert Hart-Davis (1953)
  • The Funny Bone, Elek Books (1956)
  • Until the Day She Dies, Hamish Hamilton (1960)
  • The Doomsday Book, Hamish Hamilton (1961)
  • My Name is Love, Times Press (1964)
  • Memoirs of the Forties, Alan Ross (1965)

[edit] References

  • Fear and Loathing in Fitzrovia, Paul Willetts (2003)
  • Waterstone's Guide to London Writing (1999)
  • London's Bohemia, Michael Bakewell (1999)

[edit] External links