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Against the Wind: An Autobiography

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In this fascinating and uniquely colorful autobiography, a twentieth-century master of suspense fiction candidly examines his extraordinary life, times, and art One of the twentieth century’s most respected writers of adventure and espionage thrillers, Geoffrey Household penned more than twenty novels and short story collections in a career that spanned more than fifty years—and lived a life as eventful and surprising as his acclaimed, pulse-pounding fiction. In Against the Wind, the author whom the New York Times credits with having “helped to develop the suspense story into an art form” shares his remarkable personal history with candor and wit, while exploring the creative process and his roles as a husband, father, bestselling popular artist, and citizen of his uniquely eventful time. From his years as a student at the University of Oxford to his early career in the cutthroat world of international business and finance to his patriotic service with British intelligence during World War II, with perilous postings in Greece, Romania, and the Middle East that later informed his thrilling fiction, Household evocatively recalls a peripatetic life lived purposefully and often dangerously in some of the most colorful and fascinating regions of the globe.

247 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1958

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About the author

Geoffrey Household

96 books87 followers
British author of mostly thrillers, though among 37 books he also published children's fiction. Household's flight-and-chase novels, which show the influence of John Buchan, were often narrated in the first person by a gentleman-adventurer. Among his best-know works is' Rogue Male' (1939), a suggestive story of a hunter who becomes the hunted, in 1941 filmed by Fritz Lang as 'Man Hunt'. Household's fast-paced story foreshadowed such international bestsellers as Richard Condon's thriller 'The Manchurian Candidate' (1959), Frederick Forsyth's 'The Day of the Jackal' (1971), and Ken Follett's 'Eye of the Needle' (1978) .

In 1922 Household received his B.A. in English from Magdalen College, Oxford, and between 1922 and 1935 worked in commerce abroad, moving to the US in 1929. During World War II, Household served in the Intelligence Corps in Romania and the Middle East. After the War he lived the life of a country gentleman and wrote. In his later years, he lived in Charlton, near Banbury, Oxfordshire, and died in Wardington.

Household also published an autobiography, 'Against the Wind' (1958), and several collections of short stories, which he himself considered his best work.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Jessica.
Author 6 books214 followers
October 12, 2011
Household is a charming narrator. I wouldn't rate this as highly as the best of his novels (of which I've only read the terrific Rogue Male so far), but he's had an unusual life and is atypically British: that is, very open to other ways of life, a lover of Spain and the Spanish, a linguist. The sections are titled: Traveller, Soldier, Craftsman. Soldier, the middle section, is the longest and least interesting (to me). I admit I skipped some of it. But...there are adventures and observations for all here.
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,652 reviews336 followers
May 25, 2015
Author of many thrillers and adventure novels, Geoffrey Household’s own life was as full of thrills and adventures as that of any of his heroes. A peripatetic life, first in business and commerce, later in the military during WWII, his trajectory was anything but ordinary. He even managed to fit in a couple of marriages and a couple of children – not that he gives them any prominence in this autobiography. A fascinating life, certainly, but this account of it is very dry and on occasion even tedious – I skipped much of the war episode. His rather self-deprecating, very British style makes it all seem somewhat toned down and I got no real sense of the drama that his life was so full of. I’ve only read a couple of his novels and I found them equally dull, so maybe he’s just not a writer for me. But the book has much to recommend it as an overview of a travelling life in the first half of the 20th century, and as an examination of the writer’s life and craft.
48 reviews9 followers
December 30, 2019
A somewhat dense and evasive book about Household's very interesting life. It has some of the hallmarks of him at his best -- wit, actually-interesting descriptions of logistics (such as troop movements) -- and some of what I don't like. It's not a must-read on its own, EXCEPT if you also like Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy. It turns out that Household was based in Bucharest and Cairo at about the same time as the Mannings, just as World War II broke out, and moved in the same English-expat world. Incidents that are lightly fictionalized in the Balkan Trilogy are written about factually here. It's plausible that the two writers met, though it's hard to see evidence in either one's books, and it's unlikely they would have enjoyed each other's company. But it's fascinating to read the two books together.
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