Graham Greene: The Enemy Within
By Michael Shelden
“While Norman Sherry is still engaged in writing his hugely
detailed, three-volume Greene biography comes this deconstructionist effort by
the author of studies of Cyril Connolly and Orwell. Shelden began work
intending an "affectionate portrait," but "along the way I kept
uncovering unpleasant facts." That is a considerable understatement.
Shelden has portrayed Greene as an eternal manipulator, of friends as well as
of the world press; as a man whose ostensible religion and politics were shams,
whose early books?including the much-admired Brighton Rock?contained
reprehensible anti-Semitic elements; and, artistically, as a writer who
underwent a decline after The Heart of the Matter in 1948, with only occasional
glimpses (as in The Human Factor of 1978) of the huge talents he once
possessed. Although Greene was renowned for his louche sexual habits (Shelden
asserts he could have authored a splendid guide to the world's best brothels),
it has not previously been documented that he had homosexual inclinations.
Shelden avers that in his hideaway on Capri, he dallied with young boys, and
that there are passages in his work that can only be seen as the product of a
gay sensibility. Shelden's scrutiny of Greene's work is scrupulous, and
certainly suggests that some reassessment of much of it is in order. In the
case of Greene's private life, it is clear that his habitual evasiveness and
cunning render many of his actions subject to various interpretations. Shelden's
book is certainly an impressive brief for the prosecution, even if this most
mysterious of contemporary writers continues ultimately to baffle and elude
us.”— From Publishers Weekly