Book description
Letters from Bishopsbourne is a collective biography of three of
the most distinguished stylists writing in the English language, who
lived and died in the small village of Bishopsbourne just south of
Canterbury in Kent: Richard Hooker (1554-1600), the theologian whose
major work. Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity, provided the
philosophical underpinning of the Elizabethan Anglican settlement; the
celebrated author Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) who wrote his last novels
there; and Jocelyn Brooke (1908-1966), the Proustian author of the
'orchid' trilogy which shot him to fame in the late 1940s. The book
recounts their life of action before coming to the village in search
of rural peace, and the challenges they faced after settling there.
All three died in the village relatively young, frustrated by life and
literature: Hooker because the last three books of his great work were
politically controversial and his friends would not allow him to
publish; Conrad because he was completely written out and struggled to
produce even sub-standard work; and Brooke, after his short-lived
success, because the publishing world had turned against him, refusing
to handle his final works. The book provides a completely novel
topographical context for each of the writers. Other celebrated
inhabitants appear upon the scene, including the film director,
Michael Powell, born nearby, the writer Alec Waugh, a cricket and golf
enthusiast, and the eccentric cricketing patron, Sir Horace Mann, who
for 25 years of the 18th century turned the village's great house into
the fulcrum of English cricket.
Christopher Scoble is the author of 'Colin Blythe - Lament for a
Legend' and 'Fisherman's Friend', a life of Edwardian writer Stephen
Reynolds. He lives in Dorset.