Alexis Lykiard

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Alexis Lykiard (born 1940) is a British writer of Greek heritage, who began his prolific career as novelist and poet in the 1960s. His poems about jazz have received particular acclaim, including from Maya Angelou, Hugo Williams, Roy Fisher, Kevin Bailey and others.[1] He is also known as translator of Isidore Ducasse, Comte de Lautréamont, Alfred Jarry, Antonin Artaud and many notable French literary figures. In addition, Lykiard has written two highly praised intimate memoirs of Jean Rhys: Jean Rhys Revisited (2000) and Jean Rhys: Afterwords (2006).

According to David Woolley of Poetry Wales: "As poet, novelist and translator, Alexis Lykiard has won many admirers over the years, but the early novels apart, his work has not received the popular attention it deserves. He has created a body of work that is erudite and witty but never obscure… Lykiard's language is vivid, breathtaking in its sheer physicality, while still suggesting more…"[2]

Early life and education

He was born Constantinos Alexis Lykiardopoulos[3] in Athens, Greece, in 1940, to a mother, Maria Casdagli who was from Salford (her family being involved with the Lancashire cotton industry), while his father Antonis Lykiardopoulos hailed from the island of Chios.[4] Lykiard left Greece with his parents just after the German occupation, at the start of the four-year Greek Civil War,[4] travelling via relatives in Egypt to England. He has lived since 1946 in the UK, where he learned English and was duly anglicised from the age of six.[5]

In 1957, at the age of 17, he won the first Open English Scholarship ever awarded by King's College, Cambridge, graduating with a First-class Honours degree in 1962.[6] While at Cambridge University, he was editor of the university magazine Granta (originally called The Granta).[7]

Writings

Fiction

Lykiard's debut novel The Summer Ghosts, written when he was a teenager, was a best-seller in the 1960s, dealing explicitly with sex in the era following the Lady Chatterley trial – "Described on the cover blurb as 'the literary bombshell of the year,' this is a young author's 'literary' first novel, full of complexity and poetic descriptions, the narrative framework being the protagonist's drafting a therapeutic memoir while in a Bournemouth psychiatric clinic after a breakdown."[8] Lykiard published eight further novels – including the autobiographical Strange Alphabet (set in the Greece of 1970)[9] and The Drive North (depicting the life of a freelance writer)[10] – before abandoning fiction in favour of his first love, poetry. His last published novel was based on and took its name from the 1983 British drama film Scrubbers directed by Mai Zetterling, and was written to coincide with the film's release.[11]

Poetry

His numerous collections of poems have been widely praised, and include Milesian Fables, 1976 ("...an epigrammatic quality – fresh and honest transmissions of experience" – Gavin Ewart; "Very good indeed, entertaining, well-made, and with lovely modulations of mood form grave and tender to the witty and ironic" – Vernon Scannell), Cat Kin, 1994 ("Contagiously cat-like in all its dexterous twists" – Ted Hughes); Living Jazz, 1990 ("Thank you for loving enough and living enough to write Living Jazz" – Maya Angelou) and Skeleton Keys, 2003, of which Angus Calder wrote: "His argument with the world is brilliantly waged. Readers will learn a lot while they are moved by it."[6] The suite of poems that makes up Skeleton Keys explores the troubled era in Greece into which Lykiard was born, reassessing his personal ties with that history – involving family secrets and lies, public and private betrayal and heroism – "to underline how truth and lies are relative at last".[9][12][13]

Lykiard's 40-year collection, Selected Poems 1956–96, received appreciative critical accolades, with Dominic Behan calling Lykiard "The heir to my friend Louis Macneice", while Kevin Bailey wrote: "Alexis Lykiard is the true lineal heir to Lord Rochester and Dean Swift. He is an unsettling poet to read.… Forty years devotion to one craft – that of Writer. And his earthly reward from this philistine and anti-intellectual English society? An obscurity and relative poverty that is the inverse of his talent and contribution he has made to British literary culture… The voice of quality and reason in an age of kitsch… This book is certainly a must buy."[2]

Non-fiction

Lykiard has in addition written non-fiction, including two books that draw on his friendship with Jean Rhys (Lykiard is a long-time resident of Exeter, Devon, and would visit Rhys in the nearby village of Cheriton Fitzpaine, where she lived for the last two decades of her life): Jean Rhys Revisited (2000) and Jean Rhys: Afterwords (2006). Reviewing the former, Iain Sinclair characterised it as "A haunted meditation....A proper tribute to the unjustly reforgotten, as well as an heroic version of the writer's life, the slanted autobiography",[14] while Chris Petit wrote in The Guardian:

"The richness of Lykiard's book depends on it offering more than just a memoir....He is alert to the sharpness of Rhys's inner voice, her psychological acuity and the torpor of her stories in contrast to the exactness of her prose; he, like Rhys, is drawn to careless lives. As well as being a meditation on the nature and business of writing, Jean Rhys Revisited is a piece of literary archaeology and a book of enthusiasms (Hamsun, Gissing, George Moore) that performs a useful act of referral. It is also a considered work about old age and beyond – Lykiard writes movingly about Rhys's fear of her approaching death – written by a man who was young when he knew Rhys, and is now approaching his own old age."[15]

As translator

Lykiard is a respected translator from French of avant-garde classics, including the complete works of Lautréamont, and novels by Alfred Jarry and Apollinaire (complete and unexpurgated versions of the erotic novellas Les Onze Mille Verges and Les Memoires D'Un Jeune Don Juan for the first time in English), alongside Surrealist prose and poetry, Louis Aragon, Jacques Prévert and Pierre Mac Orlan (the first unexpurgated translation of Masochists in America).[16]

Lykiard's translation of Les Chants de Maldoror by Isidore Ducasse, originally published in 1970 by Allison and Busby, was the first complete annotated English edition of the work,[17] and provided "a close reading of the original text that is stylistically accomplished (as might be expected of a professional translator who made some mark as a novelist in his own right in the 1960s and 1970s)."[18] Exact Change published Maldoror & the Complete Works of the Comte de Lautréamont in 1994, when the Washington Post Book World said: "Alexis Lykiard’s translation is both subtle and earthy… this is the best translation now available." Containing "a translation not only of all Ducasse's major texts but also of some more marginal pieces, and a thorough critical apparatus",[18] it remains the only one-volume annotated edition.[19]

Bibliography

Fiction

Poetry

Non-fiction

Selected translations

References

  1. "Living Jazz", Official website.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Selected Poems 1956–96" page, official website.
  3. Biographical notes on Skeleton Keys page, author's website.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "My Greek Background", Alexis Lykiard website.
  5. Biography at Getting On page, alexislykiard.com.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Biographical note for Getting On: Poems 2000 – 2012, Author's website.
  7. Alexis Lykiard, "Granta days", Nthposition, September 2009.
  8. "Romantic Fiction & Drama For Valentine's", South Central MediaScene 2012.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Skeleton Keys" page, Alexis Lykiard website.
  10. Alexis Lykiard, "Taking the Poetry Road", The Penniless Press.
  11. "Scrubbers", Alexis Lykiard website.
  12. "Alexis Lykiard", Corfu Blues.
  13. Catherine Isolde Eisner, "A Prisoner of My Father’s Name: Alexis Lykiard’s Skeleton Keys", 17 April 2014.
  14. "Jean Rhys Revisited" page at Alexis Lykiard website.
  15. Chris Petit, "A woman scorned" (review of Jean Rhys Revisited), The Guardian, 24 June 2000.
  16. Alexis Lykiard, "Mac Orlan", The Penniless Press.
  17. "Maldoror Englished", Journal of Les Amis d'Isidore Ducasse, 2001. Reprinted on Alexis Lykiard website.
  18. 18.0 18.1 "Comte de Lautréamont", Olive Classe (ed.), Encyclopedia of Literary Translation into English: A-L, Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 2000, p. 818.
  19. "Lautréamont – Maldoror & the Complete Works" page at Exact Change.

External links