Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
Peter Parker (1954-) was born in Herefordshire and educated in the Malverns, Dorset and London. He is the author of The Old Lie: The Great War and Public-School Ethos and biographies of J.R. Ackerley and Christopher Isherwood. He edited the Reader’s Companion to the Twentieth-Century Novel and The Reader’s Companion to Twentieth Century Writers, and was an associate editor of The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. He writes about books and gardening for a wide variety of newspapers and magazines and lives in London’s East End.
“Ackerley believed that life should be led off the leash by humans and animals alike, and he regarded the proud owners of obedient dogs with the suspicious eye of a libertarian. All too often dogs he met on walks appeared to have been cowed into submission by their power-hungry owners. Queenie’s obedience, such as it was, resulted from a mutually respectful relationship, he argued, founded upon love rather than fear.”
It is one of those rare biographies that read like fiction with twists and surprises, both good and bad, in each chapter. A must read even if you aren't a fan of biographies of non-fiction. You'll not regret it!
An openly gay man when it was not safe to be so, JRAckerly was one of those truly brave souls who blazed without an obvious trail; someone who, though pivotal in furthering other people’s careers (#Auden, #Isherwood, #Spender, #Larkin), seems to have slipped into obscurity. This, despite writing three acclaimed literary works and being a close friend of E M Forster. The son of the Banana King, the founder of the company whose name adorns most bananas found in fruit bowls today, he had a comfortable upbringing, was a war hero and was literary editor for the BBC magazine, The Listener, for decades. Not just a brilliant biography, Peter Parker’s account is a gateway to countless forgotten classic that I have added to my reading list, Hindoo Holiday and My Father and Myself being just two of many. Highly recommend.