Norman Lewis | |
Birth Name: | John Frederick Norman Lewis |
Birth Date: | 1908 6, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Forty Hill, Enfield, England |
Death Place: | Saffron Walden, Essex, England |
Genres: | --> |
Subjects: | --> |
Spouses: | --> |
Partners: | --> |
John Frederick Norman Lewis (28 June 1908 – 22 July 2003) was a British writer. While he is best known for his travel writing, he also wrote twelve novels and several volumes of autobiography.
Subjects he explored in his travel writing include life in Naples during the Allied liberation of Italy (Naples '44); Vietnam and French colonial Indochina (A Dragon Apparent); Indonesia (An Empire of the East); Burma (Golden Earth); tribal peoples of India (A Goddess in the Stones); Sicily and the Mafia (The Honoured Society and In Sicily); and the destruction caused by Christian missionaries in Latin America and elsewhere (The Missionaries).
His newspaper article entitled "Genocide in Brazil" (1969)[1] prompted the creation of Survival International—an organisation dedicated to the protection of indigenous peoples around the world.
Graham Greene described Lewis as "one of the best writers, not of any particular decade, but of our century".[2]
The early yearsLewis was born at "Clifton," which he described as a "quiet, rather dismal little house," but he was descended from a Welsh family and later identified as Welsh, at least in part.[3] 343 Carterhatch Lane, Enfield, Middlesex, a suburb of London, was born to widow Louise Charlotte Evans (née Lewis; d. 1950) and pharmacist Richard George Lewis (d. 1936). Following the passing of Lewis's older brothers, his parents adopted a spiritualist perspective and wished for Lewis's eventual career as a medium. Reference: Lewis, (John Frederick) Norman (1908–2003), traveller and author. 978-0-19-861412-8. 10.1093/ref:odnb/92251. 2007. Tomes. Jason. A clever child, Lewis was bullied by other children and sent by his parents to live for a couple of years with three deeply religious "half-mad aunts" in Wales.[4] After attending Enfield Grammar School as a young man, Lewis attempted a number of jobs during the 1930s Great Depression, including working as a freelance wedding photographer, an auctioneer, a wholesaler of umbrellas, and for a short while as a motorcycle racer at Harringay Stadium and White City. Ref name: Telegraph He was a "young rake and dandy" with a "love of fast cars and adventure" at this point in his life. [4] He lived in Woodberry Down, close to Manor House, in London, for a few years during this time. \ref> Julian Evans, Norman Lewis: A Life, Semi-Invisible Man, Pan MacMillan, 2009, pp. 95–96 \/ref>
Lewis's experiences in the British Army during World War II are recounted in different ways in his various books. According to his autobiography, "Jackdaw Cake," he was a member of the Intelligence Corps (United Kingdom)|Intelligence Corps]] in 1942–1944, serving in Algiers, Tunisia, and Naples; in other places, he claims to have been commissioned as an officer in the armed forces and to have served with the 1st King's Dragoon Guards, an armored regiment, during the Italian Campaign. The current date is February 2022. "The Telegraph" referred to his 1978 account of his experiences during the Allied occupation of Italy as "one of the great first-hand accounts of the Second World War." \ref name="Telegraph"> "Obituaries: Norman Lewis" is the title of this web page. The work "The Telegraph" was created on July 23, 2003, and the access date was February 11, 2014. His books, "Golden Earth" (1952) about Burma and "A Dragon Apparent" (1951) about French Indochina, which The Telegraph similarly praised as "the finest record of Indo-China before the devastation wrought by the Vietnam War," were written shortly after the war. Ref name: TelegraphIt's
Another major concern of Lewis's was the impact of missionary activity on tribal societies in Latin America and elsewhere. He was hostile to the activities of missionaries, especially American evangelicals. This is covered in his book The Missionaries, and several shorter pieces. He frequently said that he regarded his life's major achievement as the worldwide reaction to writing on tribal societies in South America. In 1968, his article "Genocide in Brazil", published in the Sunday Times after a journey to Brazil with the war photographer Don McCullin, created such an outcry that it led to the creation of the organisation Survival International, dedicated to the protection of first peoples around the world. Lewis later said of this article that it was "the most worthwhile of all my endeavours".[5]
Lewis was fascinated by cultures which were little touched by the modern world. This was reflected in his books on travels in Indonesia, An Empire of the East, and among the tribal peoples of India, A Goddess in the Stones.
Lewis wrote several volumes of autobiography, again concerned primarily with his observations of the many places in which he lived at various times, including St Catherine's Island in South Wales near Tenby, the Bloomsbury district of London during World War II, Nicaragua, a Spanish fishing village (Voices of the Old Sea),[2] and a village near Rome.
Lewis also wrote twelve novels. Some of these enjoyed significant success at the time of publication, but his literary reputation rests mainly on his travel writing.
While Lewis was a British officer on the Monte Cassino front, he witnessed war crimes (Marocchinate) committed by French colonial troops during the Italian campaign:
Lewis's first wife, Ernestina Corvaja,[2] was a Swiss-Sicilian.[6] Sicilian life, including the role of the Mafia, was a major theme, which he explored in The Honoured Society (1964) and In Sicily (2000). While never losing sight of the horrors inflicted by the Mafia, his accounts were not sensationalist. They were based on a detailed understanding of Sicilian society, and a deep sympathy with the sufferings of the Sicilian people. The Latin connection encouraged him to travel, resulting in his first book, Spanish Adventure (1935). The marriage had however failed by the start of the Second World War in 1939.[2] He was briefly married a second time, after the war.[2]
He died in Saffron Walden, Essex, survived by his third wife, Lesley, and their son, Gawaine, and two daughters, Kiki and Samara; and by a son, Gareth, and daughter, Karen, from his second marriage with Hester; and by a son, Ito, from his first marriage. His son Gareth is also a published writer.[2]
Lewis said that he believed in "absolutely nothing" and indeed "I do not believe in belief." He did not believe that humanity was making progress.[7] He talked about "the intense joy I derive from being alive",[6] and said he was "exceedingly happy".[7]