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British Authors - 20th Century - Literary Biography, Journalists - News & Media Biography
Malcolm Muggeridge by Gregory Wolfe β€” book cover

Malcolm Muggeridge

by Gregory Wolfe
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Overview

This biography chronicles the long and turbulent life of Malcolm Muggeridge, one of the most brilliant controversialists and media personalties of his generation whose late-in-life coming to Christ is one of the great conversion stories of this century.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Cahners\\Publishers_Weekly

In 1995, two biographies of the British satirist and "man on the telly" were published in England: Richard Ingrams's Muggeridge and this title by Wolfe (originaly published by Hodder & Stoughton). Twice as long as Ingrams's book, Wolfe's goes beyond stories of happenings and personalities to probe Muggeridge's tortured interior life as revealed in his literary works, personal correspondence and unpublished diaries. If Wolfe sometimes plods through events and literary analyses, he grows more lyrical when discussing Muggeridge's faith, ethics and political philosophy. The cynical BBC journalist's celebrated conversion to Catholicism was not the personality change of a tired old man, Wolfe argues, but the culmination of a lifetime's struggle between fleshly obsessions and spiritual longings. Based as it is on extensive research, Wolfe's book is bound to become the definitive biography of Muggeridge.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In 1995, two biographies of the British satirist and "man on the telly" were published in England: Richard Ingrams's Muggeridge and this title by Wolfe (originaly published by Hodder & Stoughton). Twice as long as Ingrams's book, Wolfe's goes beyond stories of happenings and personalities to probe Muggeridge's tortured interior life as revealed in his literary works, personal correspondence and unpublished diaries. If Wolfe sometimes plods through events and literary analyses, he grows more lyrical when discussing Muggeridge's faith, ethics and political philosophy. The cynical BBC journalist's celebrated conversion to Catholicism was not the personality change of a tired old man, Wolfe argues, but the culmination of a lifetime's struggle between fleshly obsessions and spiritual longings. Based as it is on extensive research, Wolfe's book is bound to become the definitive biography of Muggeridge. (June)

Booknews

Wolf, founder and editor of , draws on Muggeridge's (1903-1990) writings, correspondence, interviews, unpublished diaries, and his own friendship with Muggeridge to chronicle the long and turbulent life of the controversial writer and social critic. From his socialist upbringing to his years as foreign correspondent, editor, television personality, and convert to Roman Catholicism, the author delves behind the public persona to reveal the underlying spiritual and intellectual unity that runs through the many phases of his career. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1997
Publisher
Grand Rapids, Mich. : William B. Eerdmans Pub., 1997.
Pages
462
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780802838391

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