er. A right-handed batsman, he played ten first-class
matches during the 1947 English cricket season
for Cambridge University
and Kent
. He also represented the Nigeria national cricket team.
Born Sevenoaks
in 1922, Geoffrey Anson was educated at Harrow
, where he played cricket, and at the University of Cambridge
. It was at Cambridge where he made his first-class debut, playing against Essex
. Good performances against Yorkshire
and Middlesex
, against whom he scored 106, his highest first-class score, led to him having his blue almost secure, but commitments with the Colonial Service
meant that he missed the match against Oxford University
.
Later in the year he played seven County Championship
matches for his native Kent
, his last first-class match coming against Somerset
in August.
Manhattan is not altogether felicitous for fiction. It is not a city of memory, not a family city, not the capital of America so much as the iconic capital of this century. It is grand and grandiose with its two rivers acting as a border to contain the restless. Its skyscrapers and bleak, rotting tenements are a gift for photographic consumption, but for the fictional imagination the city's inchoate density is a special challenge.
The private and serious drama of guilt is not often a useful one for fiction today and its disappearance, following perhaps the disappearance from life, appears as a natural, almost unnoticed relief, like some of the challenging illnesses wiped out by drug and vaccines.
Sex, without society as its landscape, has never been of much interest to fiction.
Writing is not "the establishment of a professional reputation" as if one were a doctor or lawyer; it is not properly in the sentence with creation of a family and the purchase of a home.
Biographers, the quick in pursuit of the dead, research, organize, fill in, contradict, and make in this way a sort of completed picture puzzle with all the scramble turned into a blue eye and the parts of the right leg fitted together.
How certain human beings are able to create works of art is a mystery, and why they should wish to do so, at a great cost to themselves usually, is another mystery. Works are not created by one's life; every life is rich in material.
She never liked the constant presence of her husbands or lovers and did not like, she soon found out, to be alone — a dilemma in one shape or another common to most of mankind.