cover image Efforts at Truth: An Autobiography

Efforts at Truth: An Autobiography

Nicholas Mosley. Dalkey Archive Press, $22.95 (345pp) ISBN 978-1-56478-075-1

Nicholas Mosley is the son of Oswald Mosley, the fiery leader of the separatist union movement in England who was imprisoned for opposing WWII. This heavy cultural heritage may account for the odd mix of British upper-class bohemianism and intellectual self-flagellation that hovers over this eccentric literary dilettante. Trust funds provided by his mother and his first wife left Mosley free to move from large house to large house and from woman to woman, to father five children and to write many novels (Hopeful Monsters won the Whitbread Prize in 1990), screenplays and the biography of his father. He was also able to work pro bono as editor of Prism, an Episcopal journal, not to mention pick up a peerage in 1966--in nonliterary life, Nicholas Mosley is Lord Ravensdale. Despite the high level of intellectual discourse and Mosley's unquestionable prose skill, this book is shapeless and often tedious. He worries his ego as a dog does a slipper. First wife Rosemary stays with him through affairs and wanderings; second wife Verity is still Lady Ravensdale; and his mistress, Natalie, floats in and out of the story like a lost soul. He claims his children are too important to include here, but the gap is troubling. He relies on lengthy summaries of almost all his books to gloss the literary autobiography and accompanies them with long quotations from his own letters and those of friends. The result comes across as self-aggrandizing and not especially revealing. (June)