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Edward St Aubyn

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Edward St. Aubyn (born January 14, 1960, in Cornwall) is a British author and journalist.

Early life

He attended Westminster School and Keble College, Oxford University.

Works

St. Aubyn is the author of the Patrick Melrose series (Never Mind, Bad News, Some Hope, Mother's Milk, and At Last) and two other novels, On The Edge and A Clue to the Exit. The Patrick Melrose series is broadly autobiographical.[1] Mother's Milk was on the shortlist for the 2006 Booker Prize.

  • At Last. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2012. ISBN 978-0374298890.
  • On The Edge. Picador. 2008. ISBN 9780330453974.
  • A Clue To The Exit. Picador. 2008. ISBN 9780330458054.
  • Mother's Milk. Grove Press, Open City Books. 2005. ISBN 978-1890447403.
  • Some Hope: A Trilogy. Grove Press, Open City Books. 2003. ISBN 1890447366.

Patrick Melrose Series

The series starts with Never Mind in Patrick’s fifth year in a mansion in the South of France. It paints a picture of his father as a monstrous member the fading English nobility who believes in suave public school(elite English boarding school) cruelty and that a truly noble man is languid. It is revealed that Patrick was the product of rape and that at this mansion his father raped him, not for any sexual pleasure but out of mere insatiable cruelty. In the 2nd book, Bad News, Patrick is in his early 20s, reveling in a heroin addiction, and in New York to collect his father’s ashes. The novel portrays Patrick’s searches and highs and avoidance of the significance of his father’s death and the vague pleasure he gets from it. In Some Hope Patrick is recovering from his addiction, finally admits to a friend about his father’s actions towards him in his childhood and goes to a party which is also attended by Princess Margaret where St Aubyn gets to sketch an absurd upper class In Mother’s Milk Patrick has a family and children. His mother, who in his childhood victimized him through inaction, now actively victimizes him through having an insatiable need to be charitable and effectively disinheriting Patrick by giving away the family home he grew up in to a new age religion foundation. He ascends to a lower class than that of his ancestors and works as a lawyer. With all this stacking up he has an inevitable. While Mother’s milk is about the wonders of birth and early childhood, At Last is a meditation on death. In the final instalment of the series his midlife crisis has caused his wife to leave him and his horrible mother has died. He finally deals with and accepts his history.

"Mother's Milk" was made into a feature film in 2011 and finished post production the following year. It opened in UK cinemas in November 2012 to some excellent reviews in publications such as The Guardian, Sight & Sound and The Observer. The screenplay was written by St Aubyn and director Gerald Fox. It stars Jack Davenport, Adrian Dunbar, Diana Quick and Margaret Tyzack in her last performance.

References

  1. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (21 February 2012). "Laying to Rest Familial Horrors: Edward St. Aubyn's 'At Last,' an Autobiographical Novel". New York Times. Retrieved 1 October 2012.

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