Christopher Isherwood Popular Books

Christopher Isherwood Biography & Facts

Christopher William Bradshaw Isherwood (26 August 1904 – 4 January 1986) was an Anglo-American novelist, playwright, screenwriter, autobiographer, and diarist. His best-known works include Goodbye to Berlin (1939), a semi-autobiographical novel which inspired the musical Cabaret (1966); A Single Man (1964), adapted as a film by Tom Ford in 2009; and Christopher and His Kind (1976), a memoir which "carried him into the heart of the Gay Liberation movement". Biography Early life and work Isherwood was born in 1904 on his family's estate in Cheshire near Stockport in the north-west of England. He was the elder son of Francis Edward Bradshaw Isherwood (1869–1915), known as Frank, a professional soldier in the York and Lancaster Regiment, and Kathleen Bradshaw Isherwood, née Machell Smith (1868–1960), the only daughter of a successful wine merchant. He was the grandson of John Henry Isherwood, squire of Marple Hall and Wyberslegh Hall, Cheshire, and he included among his ancestors the Puritan judge John Bradshaw, who signed the death warrant of King Charles I and served for two years as Lord President of the Council, effectively President of the English Republic. Isherwood's father Frank was educated at the University of Cambridge and Sandhurst Military Academy, fought in the Boer War, and was killed in the First World War. Isherwood's mother, Kathleen, was, through her own mother, a member of the wealthy Greene brewing family of Greene King, and Isherwood was a cousin of the novelist Graham Greene, who was also related to the brewing family. Frank and Kathleen christened their first son Christopher William Bradshaw Isherwood, which Isherwood simplified on becoming a United States citizen in 1946. At Repton, his boarding school in Derbyshire, Isherwood met his lifelong friend Edward Upward, with whom he invented an imaginary English village called Mortmere, as related in his fictional autobiography, Lions and Shadows (1938). He went up to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, as a history scholar, wrote jokes and limericks on his second year Tripos and was asked to leave without a degree in 1925. At Christmas 1925, he was reintroduced to a prep school friend, W. H. Auden. Through Auden, Isherwood met the younger poet Stephen Spender, who printed Auden's first collection, Poems (1928). Upward, Isherwood, Auden, and Spender were identified as the most exciting new literary group in England in the 1930s. Auden dubbed Isherwood the novelist in what came to be known as the Auden Group or Auden Generation. With Cecil Day-Lewis and Louis MacNeice, Auden and Spender later attracted the name the MacSpaunday Poets, with which Isherwood is also associated. After leaving Cambridge, Isherwood worked as a private tutor and later as secretary to a string quartet led by the violinist André Mangeot while he completed his first novel. This was All the Conspirators, published in 1928, about the struggle for self-determination between children and their parents. In October 1928, Isherwood enrolled as a medical student at King's College London, but he left after six months. Sojourn in Berlin In March 1929, Isherwood joined Auden in Berlin, where Auden was spending a post-graduate year. His primary motivation for making the trip was the sexual freedom that Weimar Berlin offered, as he later wrote: "To Christopher, Berlin meant Boys." The ten-day visit changed Isherwood's life. He began an affair with a German boy whom he met at a cellar bar called The Cosy Corner, and he was "brought face to face with his tribe" at Magnus Hirschfeld's Institute for Sexual Science. He visited Berlin again in July and relocated there in November. In Berlin, Isherwood completed his second novel, The Memorial (1932), about the impact of the First World War on his family and his generation. He also continued his habit of keeping a diary. In his diary, he gathered raw material for Mr. Norris Changes Trains (1935), inspired by his real-life friendship with Gerald Hamilton, and for Goodbye to Berlin (1939), his portrait of the city in which Adolf Hitler was rising to power—enabled by poverty, unemployment, increasing attacks on Jews and Communists, and ignored by the defiant hedonism of night life in the cafés, bars, and brothels. Goodbye to Berlin included stories published in the leftist magazine, New Writing, and it included Isherwood's 1937 novella Sally Bowles, in which he created his most famous character, based on a young Englishwoman, Jean Ross, with whom he briefly shared a flat. In the United States, the Berlin novels were published together as The Berlin Stories in 1945. In 1951, Goodbye to Berlin was adapted for the New York stage by John van Druten using the title I Am a Camera, taken from Isherwood's opening paragraphs. The play inspired the hit Broadway musical Cabaret (1966), later adapted to film as Cabaret in 1972. In 1932, a 27-year-old Isherwood started a relationship with a 16-year-old German boy, Heinz Neddermeyer. They fled Nazi Germany together in May 1933, traveling initially to Greece. Neddermeyer was refused entry to England in January 1934, launching an odyssey in search of a country where they could settle together. They lived in the Canary Islands, Copenhagen, Brussels, Amsterdam, and Sintra, Portugal, while trying to obtain a new nationality and passport for Neddermeyer. In May 1937, while he and Isherwood were living in Luxembourg, Neddermeyer was suddenly expelled into Germany. Neddermeyer was arrested the next day by the Gestapo for draft evasion and reciprocal onanism. Neddermeyer was sentenced to three and a half years of hard labor and military service. (No one was ever found innocent by a Nazi court.) He married in 1938 and the couple had one child, a son, born in 1940. Neddermeyer survived the war and in 1956 sent Isherwood a letter asking for money to help escape East Germany, which Isherwood provided. The last known contact between the two men was a note of condolence from Neddermeyer to Isherwood on the death of Isherwood's mother in 1960. During this period, Isherwood returned often to London where he took his first movie-writing job, working with Viennese director Berthold Viertel on the film Little Friend (1934). He collaborated with Auden on three plays – The Dog Beneath the Skin (1935), The Ascent of F6 (1936), and On the Frontier (1938) – all produced by Robert Medley and Rupert Doone's Group Theatre. He also worked on Lions and Shadows (1938), a fictionalized autobiography of his education — both in and out of school — in the 1920s. In January 1938, Isherwood and Auden traveled to China to write Journey to a War (1939) about the Sino-Japanese conflict. They returned to England the following summer via the United States and decided to emigrate there in January 1939. Life in the United States While living in Hollywood, California, Isherwood befriended Truman Capote, an up-and-coming young writer who would be influenced by Isherwood's Berlin Stories, most spe.... Discover the Christopher Isherwood popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Christopher Isherwood books.

Best Seller Christopher Isherwood Books of 2024

  • A Spiritual Bloomsbury synopsis, comments

    A Spiritual Bloomsbury

    Antony Copley

    A Spiritual Bloomsbury is an exploration of how three English writersEdward Carpenter, E.M. Forster, and Christopher Isherwoodsought to come to terms with their homosexuality by en...

  • Life of David Hockney synopsis, comments

    Life of David Hockney

    Catherine Cusset & Teresa Fagan

    Named a Best Book of the Year by The Advocate“Catherine Cusset’s book caught a lot of me. I could recognize myself.” David HockneyWith clear, vivid prose, this meticulously researc...

  • Goodbye to Berlin synopsis, comments

    Goodbye to Berlin

    Christopher Isherwood

    Isherwood's classic story of Berlin in the 1930s and the inspiration for Cabaret now in a standalone edition. First published in 1934, Goodbye to Berlin has been popularized on s...

  • The Sun and Her Stars synopsis, comments

    The Sun and Her Stars

    Donna Rifkind

    National Jewish Book Award FinalistThe littleknown story of screenwriter Salka Viertel, whose salons in 1930s and 40s Hollywood created a refuge for a multitude of famous figures w...

  • Everybody synopsis, comments

    Everybody

    Olivia Laing

    Warum unser Körper politisch ist: Olivia Laing erzählt unter völlig neuen Vorzeichen von den Protestbewegungen des 20. Jahrhunderts.Eine Tour de Force von »einer der bedeutendsten ...

  • Christopher Isherwood Inside Out synopsis, comments

    Christopher Isherwood Inside Out

    Katherine Bucknell

    A stunningly intimate exploration of the writer and gay cultural icon and of his lifelong search for authenticity. The story of Christopher Isherwood’s life is one of pilgrimage: a...

  • Berlin synopsis, comments

    Berlin

    Rory Maclean

    Why are we drawn to certain cities? Perhaps because of a story read in childhood. Or a chance teenage meeting. Or maybe simply because the place touches us, embodying in its tribes...

  • Eminent Outlaws synopsis, comments

    Eminent Outlaws

    Christopher Bram

    This “standard text of the defining era of gay literati” tells the cultural history of the interconnected lives of the 20th century's most influential gay writers (Philadelphia Inq...

  • The Fictional Minds of Modernism synopsis, comments

    The Fictional Minds of Modernism

    Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso

    Challenging the notion that modernism is marked by an "inward turn" – a configuration of the individual as distinct from the world – this collection delineates the relation...

  • Berlin synopsis, comments

    Berlin

    Barney White-Spunner

    The intoxicating history of an extraordinary city and her peoplefrom the medieval kings surrounding Berlin's founding to the world wars, tumult, and reunification of the twentieth ...

  • Das andere Berlin synopsis, comments

    Das andere Berlin

    Robert Beachy

    Zwischen Repression und Freiheit: Die Geschichte der Homosexualität in DeutschlandHomosexualität ist eine deutsche Erfindung – zu dieser überraschenden Erkenntnis kommt Robert Beac...

  • Queer Times synopsis, comments

    Queer Times

    Jamie M. Carr

    This book maps Christopher Isherwood's intellectual and aesthetic reflections from the late 1930s through the late 1970s. Drawing on the queer theory of Eve Sedgwick and the e...

  • Scattershot synopsis, comments

    Scattershot

    Bernie Taupin

    NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER An evocative, cleareyed, and revealing memoir by Bernie Taupin, the lyrical master and longtime collaborator of Elton John“I loved writing, I loved chroni...

  • Der Tempel synopsis, comments

    Der Tempel

    Stephen Spender

    Ende der 1920er Jahre reist der prüde Engländer Paul Schoner nach Hamburg. Die lustvolle Bejahung des menschlichen Körpers, die er hier in Strandbädern und Nachtbars erlebt, ist fü...

  • Where Joy Resides synopsis, comments

    Where Joy Resides

    Christopher Isherwood

    Best known for The Berlin Storiesthe inspiration for the Tony and Academy Awardwinning musical CabaretChristopher Isherwood (1904–1986) was a major figure in twentiethcentury ficti...