Jeffrey Meyers, the author of highly acclaimed biographies of Hemingway
and George Orwell, offers this masterly work on British novelist D. H.
Lawrence (1885-1930). Meyers' fresh insights into Lawrence's life
illuminate Lawrence's working-class childhood, his tempestuous marriage,
and his death in France after the scandalous publication of Lady
Chatterley's Lover, revealing Lawrence's complex method of intermingling
autobiography and fiction. Through intensive research and access to
unpublished essays and letters of Lawrence and his circle, Meyers
describes the circumstances of his mother's death, the reason for the
suppression of The Rainbow, and the author's protean (and extreme)
sexuality that mirrored that of his fiction.