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Alan Paton: A Biography by Peter F. Alexander — book cover

Alan Paton: A Biography

by Peter F. Alexander
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Overview

Alan Paton's Cry, the Beloved Country, a classic of modern literature still read by thousands of people every year, brought international attention to the political turmoil in South Africa and its repressive system of apartheid when it was published in 1948. Few people, however, are aware of Paton's astonishing range of abilities, abilities which gave him success in four separate careers: as a teacher, prison reformer, writer, and politician. In Alan Paton: A Biography, Peter F. Alexander, a scholar and writer who knew Paton personally for fifteen years, brings us the first full biography of the South African novelist, written with the cooperation of the writer's widow, his two sons, and based on the most intimate biographical documents, ranging from Paton's and his first wife's diaries to love-letters.
Alan Paton: A Biography is the first book to provide insight into those aspects of Paton's life which he chose to exclude from his autobiographies. From the diffculties of his first marriage to his driving ambition to enter South African politics and reform his native country, Paton is shown here as a much more complex and colorful figure than the public perception of him suggests. Alexander reveals that Paton was a man of extreme passions, capable, as a teacher and prison principal, of displays of a violent temper. Towards the end of his life, he became a heavy drinker in spite of a rigorously puritanical upbringing. Yet Paton's highly developed sense of humor, evinced in both his writing and his public speeches, and the generous Christian faith that provided him with an all-embracing philosophy, transcended these flaws, and emerge as perhaps his most distinguishing traits.
Alan Paton: A Biography is a "warts and all" portrait of a man whose greatness was hard-won, and whose sympathy and tolerance for others was based on his own moral struggles—and victories. It is also a portrait of 20th Century South Africa and the amazing political metamorphosis that country saw during Paton's lifetime.

This first full biography of South African novelist Alan Paton, author of Cry, the Beloved Country, is based on exclusive access to unpublished manuscripts, love letters, and diary extracts. It paints a complex and color portrait of a passionate man and of life in South Africa, with a fascinating history of the rise, and fight against, apartheid. Photos.

About the Author, Peter F. Alexander

About the Author
Peter F. Alexander, born and raised in South Africa, first met Alan Paton while working on his doctoral thesis at Cambridge University. They began a friendship that lasted for fifteen years until Paton's death in 1988. Professor Alexander has written biographies of Roy Campbell and William Plomer and is currently Associate Professor of English at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. He is married and has two children.

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Editorials

Hazel Rochman

Since the publication of "Cry, the Beloved Country" in 1948, this South African novel has sold millions and Paton was lionized until his death in 1988. Yet, both the book and the author were always under attack. The racist government harassed him and withdrew his passport. On the other hand, antiapartheid activists criticized him for his sentimental ideal of Uncle Tom-style blacks, for his friendship with the conservative Zulu leader Buthulezi, and for his opposition to international sanctions. Biographer Alexander defends Paton against those charges, maintaining that he always stayed true to his Christian ideals of nonviolence and to his liberal values. Still, there's nothing fawning about this long, detailed, lively account of Paton's personal life and his career as teacher, prison reformer, writer, and politician. Alexander makes clear that Paton was "a rich and strange mixture of sinner and saint" and that it was his lifelong struggle with his own flaws and failures that allowed him to feel for others.

Book Details

Published
August 18, 1994
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Pages
536
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780198112372

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