Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jocelyn Brooke

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Jocelyn Brooke

Role
  
Author


Died
  
1966

Jocelyn Brooke jocelynbrookecomwpcontentuploads200812jbjpg

Books
  
The military orchid, The Image Of A Drawn Sword, The Dog at Clambercrown, Conventional weapons, The Military Orchid and Other No

Education
  
Worcester College, Oxford

Soldier's Song by Jocelyn Brooke - Elgar: Pomp and Circumstance Op 39 March No. 3 in C Minor


Jocelyn Brooke (30 November 1908 – 29 October 1966) was an English author born in Kent. He wrote several unique, semi-autobiographical novels, as well as some poetry. His most famous works include the Orchid Trilogy—The Military Orchid (1948), A Mine of Serpents (1949), and The Goose Cathedral (1950)—and The Image of a Drawn Sword (1950).

Educated at Bedales (after escaping twice from a public school) and Worcester College, Oxford, Brooke's childhood revolved mostly around his principal interests of amateur botany and fireworks, in the shadow of the First World War. "When the Second World War began he enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) and became one of the pox wallahs, those working to treat venereal disease. Brooke was decorated for bravery." Elements of his experiences, and his love of the military life, appear in most of his subsequent works.

Though the Orchid Trilogy strays into a typically English vein of humour, the idyllic land of his childhood and his obsession with le paradis perdu often bring in an element of intense melancholy, something developed in paranoia and isolation in The Image of a Drawn Sword.

References

Jocelyn Brooke Wikipedia