Sunday, January 28, 2018

Los Angeles Review of Books: In Youth is Suffering: Denton Welch and the Literature of Convalescence

Denton Welch (1935)  Gerald Mackenzie Leet (British, 1913-1998)
Denton Welch (1935)
Gerald Mackenzie Leet (English, 1913-1998)





























Reblogged from Los Angeles Review of Books (LARB):



In Youth is Suffering: Denton Welch and the Literature of Convalescence
By Daniel Felsenthal

"In 1935, the writer and artist Denton Welch, then a 20-year-old student at Goldsmiths’ College in London, was struck by a car while biking to his aunt’s house in Surrey. It was the beginning of a bank-holiday weekend, and if his autobiographical fiction can be taken as fact, Welch was unused to the amount of traffic on the road. The vehicle crushed his legs, leaving him catheterized and sporadically impotent, with ultimately fatal injuries to his spine and kidneys. Before he died at the age of 33, Welch drafted three novels, Maiden Voyage (1943), In Youth Is Pleasure (1944), and the posthumously published A Voice Through a Cloud (1950), along with numerous stories and poems. He also produced oil paintings, watercolors, and a refurbished dollhouse now in the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum of Childhood. His biography places him in a lineage of doomed literary geniuses, one that includes Flannery O’Connor and Carson McCullers, whose premature awareness of their own mortality gave their artistic visions an askew acuteness."