2012 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest deadline approaching

The submission deadline is approaching for the 8th Annual (2012) Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest, sponsored by the Society’s journal Evelyn Waugh Studies and judged by its editorial board. The winning essay will receive a prize of $250 and will be published in a future issue of Evelyn Waugh Studies.

Undergraduates in any part of the world are eligible to enter. Submissions must be made by December 31st, 2012 and should not exceed 20 pages or 5,000 words.

Entries (electronic submissions preferred) should be directed by email to Dr. John H. Wilson at (click to email), or by post to Dr. Wilson at:

Dr. John H. Wilson
Department of English
Lock Haven University
Lock Haven, PA 17745
USA

Share
Posted in Undergraduate Essay Contest | Tagged | Comments Off on 2012 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest deadline approaching

Winner announced of 2011 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest

The Evelyn Waugh Society is pleased to announce the winner of the seventh (2011) annual Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest. Congratulations to Robert Sherron, whose essay “Guy’s Qualitative Journey towards True Vocation in Sword of Honour” was judged to be the best of those submitted. Mr. Sherron is a junior undergraduate at the University of Dallas double majoring in English and Theology, with a concentration in Applied Physics.

On the winning submission, one judge commented, “[T]he best essay to me was ‘Guy’s Qualitative Journey towards True Vocation in Sword of Honour,’ by Robert Sherron. Much the most interesting, original and the best written.” Another stated “First rate: sober, accurate, perceptive, and in Catholic terms informative to me. Written with authority.”

Our thanks go to all who submitted an essay. One judge found the quality of the submissions as a whole to be the best he has seen in the time he’s been involved in the contest: “Just great.”

Mr. Sherron’s winning submission will be printed in the next issue of Evelyn Waugh Studies and also posted here.

An announcement regarding the 2012 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest will be made later this year.

Share
Posted in Evelyn Waugh Society, Sword of Honour, Undergraduate Essay Contest | Tagged | Comments Off on Winner announced of 2011 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest

Arthur Evelyn St. John Waugh: Oct. 28, 1903 – Apr. 10, 1966

Today is the 46th anniversary of the death of Evelyn Waugh.

Share
Posted in Evelyn Waugh | Comments Off on Arthur Evelyn St. John Waugh: Oct. 28, 1903 – Apr. 10, 1966

BBC television documentary on the Commandos in WWII

EWS member Jeffrey Manley brings to our attention Castle Commando, a fascinating new BBC documentary about British Commandos in World War II and their specialized training. Mr. Manley writes:

[The program] features prominently both Waugh and his nemesis Lord Lovat. Waugh’s diaries for 1940-41 are quoted to illustrate the shambolic nature of the early commando units. Lovat is given credit for addressing the problems described by Waugh by organizing special training for the commandos after their formation in 1940. This was first centered at Inverailort and Loch Ailort, but was later set up on much larger scale at Achnacarry on the estate of the Cameron of Lochiel. Most of the program is devoted to the course of rigorous training offered at Achnacarry. To support a point made in the documentary’s audio commentary about the realism of the training, the program quotes from Waugh’s diary entry for Sept 28, 1942 in which he mentions that a man in the first group of trainees (made up of ex-policemen) had been killed during an exercise a few days previously.

As an example of the success of the training credited to Lovat and Achnacarry, the film cites the raid on Dieppe in 1942. I had always thought this was an unmitigated disaster, but not so according to this version. Two commando units (one lead by Lovat) participated in successful preliminary raids to knock out gun installations east and west of Dieppe, raids which the program suggests demonstrated the value of the hard training given the commandos. The raids were intended to soften up the Germans for the main thrust undertaken by Canadian forces, but that part was indeed a disaster. Although not mentioned in the program, I think it was Lovat’s order to assign Waugh to basic training at the Achnacarry depot (and Waugh’s efforts to thwart Lovat’s orders) that lead to Waugh’s sacking from the commandos (see Stannard II, 85-86).

This interesting, well written, and well-edited documentary contains interviews of commando veterans who trained at Achnacarry intercut with black-and-white training films from the war and talking heads pronouncing on the events described.

The program is available for five more days at the BBC program archive. Viewers outside the UK will need to use a proxy server to watch it.

Share
Posted in Documentaries, Television Programs, World War II | Tagged , , | Comments Off on BBC television documentary on the Commandos in WWII

Evelyn Waugh’s review of Catch-22

In 1961, soliciting a blurb for the coming release of Joseph Heller’s Catch-22, an employee of its publisher Simon & Schuster sent an advance copy to Evelyn Waugh. His reply to Miss Bourne begins:

Thank you for sending me Catch 22. I am sorry that the book fascinates you so much. It has many passages quite unsuitable to a lady’s reading.

See Letters of Note for the full text of Waugh’s reply.

Share
Posted in Letters, Miscellaneous | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Evelyn Waugh’s review of Catch-22

The Royal College of Psychiatrists and Waugh/Pinfold

On the website of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, in a section devoted to books that have a mental health theme, Dr. Alexandra Pitman reviews The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold:

Both author and protagonist describe alcoholic hallucinosis – a relatively rare complication of prolonged alcohol abuse which involves the development of psychotic symptoms. In heavy drinkers the disorder tends to occur in the tailing-off phase of a binge rather than on stopping completely, and is characterised by auditory hallucinations, occasionally with visual components.

Also at the RCP, “Creativity and Mental Disorder,” a paper in which psychiatrist Dr. John Morgan reflects on the link between creativity and mental health. Evelyn Waugh is one of the writers considered, along with Iris Murdoch and Marcel Proust.

Share
Posted in Articles, Fiction, The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Maugham, Ford, Waugh, and the experience of war

In The Spectator‘s Book Blog, Steven McGregor discusses Somerset Maugham’s The Hero, Ford Madox Ford’s Parade’s End, and Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour Trilogy in the light of the current conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In a follow-up post, David Blackburn examines Sword of Honour and Waugh’s Yugoslavia experiences more closely.

Share
Posted in Articles, Fiction, Sword of Honour | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Evelyn Waugh’s personal guidelines for dealing with fan mail

As above, from Flavorwire.

Share
Posted in Evelyn Waugh, Letters, Miscellaneous | Tagged | Comments Off on Evelyn Waugh’s personal guidelines for dealing with fan mail

Film adaptation of Bella Fleace Gave a Party

The Evening Standard (London) reports that a film has been made of Evelyn Waugh’s short story Bella Fleace Gave a Party, first published in Harper’s Bazaar in 1932. The film stars Johnny Standing and Siân Phillips and will premiere at the Aspen Shortsfest this April.

A television adadaptation of Bella Fleace was broadcast in the US in 1955 as an episode of the series Robert Montgomery Presents.

Share
Posted in Adaptations, Events, Film, Short Stories, Television | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Film adaptation of Bella Fleace Gave a Party

Party like it’s 1929: Vile Bodies at the V&A

This Friday, Feb. 24th, as part of its Friday Late series, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London is putting on an evening of entertainment with the theme of Bright Young Things. Included in the program is a theater adaptation of Vile Bodies (Raphael Galleries 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. and 8:30 to 9:30 p.m.).

Share
Posted in Adaptations, Events, Theater, Vile Bodies | Tagged , | Comments Off on Party like it’s 1929: Vile Bodies at the V&A