Alexander Baron

Alexander Baron
Born Joseph Alexander Bernstein
(1917-12-04)4 December 1917
Maidenhead, Berkshire, England
Died 6 December 1999(1999-12-06) (aged 82)
Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead, London
Occupation Novelist, screenwriter
Nationality British
Citizenship London
Notable works From the City from the Plough (1948), Rosie Hogarth (1951), The Human Kind (1953), The Lowlife (1963), King Dido (1969)

Alexander Baron (4 December 19176 December 1999) was a British author and screenwriter. He is best known for his highly acclaimed novel about D-Day entitled From the City from the Plough (1948) and his London novel The Lowlife (1963).

Early life

Baron's father was Barnet Bernstein, a Polish-Jewish immigrant to Britain who settled in the East End of London in 1908 and later worked as a master furrier. Baron was born in Maidenhead, where his mother Fanny had been evacuated during Zeppelin raids. The family soon returned to London, and Baron was raised in the Hackney district of London. He attended Hackney Downs School.

Politics and wartime

During the 1930s, with his schoolfriend Ted Willis, Baron was a leading activist and organiser of the Labour League of Youth (at that time aligned with the Communist Party of Great Britain). He campaigned against the fascists in the streets of the East End and edited the Young Communist League (UK) magazine Challenge. Baron became increasingly disillusioned with far left politics as he spoke to International Brigade fighters returning from the Spanish Civil War. He ceased to work for the Communist Party after the Hitler–Stalin Pact of August 1939, and finally broke with the communists immediately after the war.[1]

Baron served in the Pioneer Corps of the British Army during World War II, and was among the first Allied troops to be landed in Sicily, Italy and on D-Day. Between 1943 and late 1944, he experienced fierce fighting in the Italian campaign, Normandy and in Northern France and Belgium. In 1945 he was transferred as an Instructor to a British Army training camp in Ireland, where he received a serious head injury and was hospitalised for over six months.

Alexander Baron: His novels of war and London caught the essential decency of mankind John Williams 8 December 1999, The Guardian; accessed 26 August 2008</ref> Other themes of his novels were London life, politics, class, relations between men and women, and the relationship between the individual and society.

While he continued to write novels, in the 1950s Baron wrote screenplays for Hollywood, and by the 1960s he had become a regular writer on BBC's Play for Today. He wrote several episodes of the A Family at War series: 'The Breach in the Dyke' (1970), 'Brothers in War' (1970), 'A Lesson in War' (1970), 'Believed Killed' (1971), 'The Lost Ones' (1971), and 'Two Fathers' (1972).[2] Later he became well known for drama serials like Poldark and A Horseman Riding By, and in the 1980s for BBC classic literary adaptions including Ivanhoe, Sense and Sensibility (1981), Jane Eyre (1983), Oliver Twist (1985) and Vanity Fair (1987). He contributed several episodes to Granada Television's The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1984–1985).[3] For a detailed list of his film and television work, please see his IMDB entry.[4]

In 1991, Baron was elected an Honorary Fellow of Queen Mary, University of London, in recognition of his contribution to the historical and social understanding of East London.[5]

Baron's personal papers are held in the archives of the University of Reading. His wartime letters and unpublished memoirs were used by the historian Sean Longden for his book To the Victor the Spoils, a social history of the British Army between D Day and VE Day.[6] Baron has also been the subject of essays by Iain Sinclair and Ken Worpole.

Since Baron died in December 1999 his novels have been republished several times, testifying to a strong resurgence of interest among in his work among the reading public as well as among critics and academics. These include Baron's first book, the war novel From the City, From the Plough (Black Spring Press, 2010); his cult novel about the London underworld of the early 1960s, The Lowlife (Harvill, 2001; Black Spring Press, 2010; translated into Spanish as "Jugador", La Bestia Equilátera, 2012), which was cited in Jon Savage’s England’s Dreaming as a literary antecedent of punk; King Dido (Five Leaves, 2009), a story of the violent rise and fall of an East End London tough in Edwardian England; Rosie Hogarth (Five Leaves, 2010); and his second war novel There's No Home, the story of a love affair between a British soldier and Sicilian woman during a lull in the fierce fighting of the Italian campaign (Sort Of Books, 2011; Chinese edition published by Hunan Art and Literature Publishing House, 2013). Baron's third work based on his wartime experiences, The Human Kind, was republished by Black Spring Press in Autumn 2011. His novel about a Jewish RAF officer's return to post-war London, With Hope, Farewell (1952), and his semi-autobiographical account of a young man's political coming-of-age "The In-Between Time" (1971) are both scheduled for re-issue in 2016 or 2017

Works

Novels
Film screenplays
Story:
#the man who knew too much

References

  1. Information from the Baron family.
  2. See the Family at War fan site: http://bearspace.baylor.edu/Richard_Veit/www/index.htm>
  3. Alexander Baron: His novels of war and London caught the essential decency of mankind John Williams 8 December 1999, The Guardian; accessed 26 August 2008
  4. For Alexander Baron's film and television work, see http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0056192/>
  5. See http://www.qmul.ac.uk/alumni/notablealumni/honoraryfellows/>
  6. To the Victor the Spoils Sean Longden (Constable and Robinson, 2007). See introduction and index.
  7. Blurb on front cover of the 1964 paperback edition of Alexander Baron The Lowlife. Fontana Books.
  8. New edition of King Dido: http://inpressbooks.co.uk/king_dido_alexander_baron_i019947.aspx.
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