RARE BOOK GUIDE - THE RUNNERS, THE RIDERS & THE ODDS

12 May 2011

Same name, different game…..



A posting inspired by finding in Any Amount of Books, a few years ago, a slim volume bearing my name. I bought it, thinking that there would now be one less person who thought I was a New Zealand poet who had been born in 1937 and who had written a poem entitled ‘Pullover’:

‘I want to be your little black sleeveless pullover
so I can feel your ribs
pout gently for your boobs…’

Unfortunately, ABE currently has one copy of Mr Healey’s little book for sale, but I take some comfort from knowing that other more distinguished writers than myself have their literary doppelgangers (if that’s the right word ). Here are some I found.

Caveat emptor !

Iain Banks, cult Scottish author
Dr Ian Banks, author of the hardly cultish, Not Feeling Well ?

William Blake, poet, artist, mystic ( 1757 – 1827)
William Blake, author of A penknife in my pocket and Wayfarer, a voice from the Southern Mountains

William Boyd, British novelist, currently at the top of his game
William C Boyd, author of Textbook of Pathology (1970)

William S Burroughs, Harvard educated cult junkie, wife-killer.
William J Burroughs, author of Weather.
William E Burroughs, author of Deep Black: Space Espionage and National Security.

Robert Burns, Scottish literary icon, peasant poet
Robert Burns, author of Seven Steps to Stop a Heart Attack

James Boswell, sex fiend, lickspittle to Dr Samuel Johnson.
James Boswell, 20th century book illustrator
James D Boswell, author of The Sower’s Seeds

John Clare, peasant poet .
John D. Clare, author of American Indian Life.

Thomas Dolby, early nineteenth century radical, author of Floristan
Thomas Dolby, indie musician and composer.

George Eliot, Victorian novelist
George Elliott, author of The Kissing Man
George P Elliott, author of Conversions: Literature and Modernist Deviation.

David Gascoyne, tall surrealist poet and Francophile
David Gascoyne, author of Let’s Visit Norway!

Kenneth Grahame, author of Wind in the Willows.
Kenneth G. Graham, author of children’s classic, A Study Skills Handbook (1984 )

Graham Greene, English Catholic novelist.
Graeme Green, Canadian novelist whose first (‘scarce’ )novel was Six Legs (1969).

Henry Green, cult novelist, author of Moving, Living, Being..etc
Henry Green, author of Favourite Movie Themes

Thomas Hardy, gloomy novelist and poet
Thomas Hardie, author of Sermons (1811)
Thomas Hardie, author of the ever popular Higher Physical Education Success Guide

Robin Healey, author of Hertfordshire—a Shell Guide etc
Robin Healey, New Zealand alleged poet.

Henry James, American novelist
Henry James, author of The Farmer’s Guide to the Internet (1996)


David Jones, ethereal artist and war poet.
David Jones, author of Baboon

Charles Lamb, author of Essays of Elia (1823).
Charles W. Lamb, author of Essentials of Marketing (1999)

[Robin Healey]

Many thanks Robin...To be continued with the other T.E. Lawrence and the other D.H. Lawrence and many others. Let me add one of the most confusing doppelgangers-- Winston Churchill (the greatest Brit ever) and Winston Churchill (forgotten American romantic novelist). The unsaleable Winston Churchill is often taken for the good one and fancy prices are demanded especially on Ebay. Almost all his novels begin with the letter C. ('The Crisis' 'The Crossing' 'The Celebrity' 'Coniston' etc.,) Wikipedia has this on them: "The British Churchill, upon becoming aware of the American Churchill's books, wrote to him suggesting that he would sign his own works "Winston S. Churchill", using his middle name (actually part of his surname), "Spencer", to differentiate them. This suggestion was accepted, with the comment that the American Churchill would have done the same, had he any middle names." Winston S. Churchill did actually write a novel 'Savrola' (1900) which can command as much as £1000 in the first state (no copyright statement on verso of title). To add confusion both men were amateur painters...There is also a good poet called Brian Jones, not the drug friendly Stone and a writer on poster art known as Tony Curtis, not the screen idol...

9 comments:

Angus said...

Oh, and don't forget "So I Went to Prison", by Edna O'Brien. (If you want a copy, by the way, there are quite a few out there, many of them described on ABE as "Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight, bright, clean and strong", a description that I'm glad to say applies to lots of books these days: I googled this phrase and found no fewer than 48,200 hits, even when searching for the phrase within quotes. Clearly the condition of secondhand books is improving: who said the world was going to hell in a handbasket?)

Joel Robuchon said...

Well spotted Angus. That phrase "Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight, bright, clean and strong" sounds sort of New York Irish. I could only find 12412 exact examples on ABE . The 'surprisingly' is a little disingenuous especially after being surprised 12000 times about how well a book has survived. Still better than 'good for its age' which usually means a poor copy. J R

Anonymous said...

Glad to see the ubiquity of the phrase "remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved" has been picked up on. The word "remains" leads one to envision pitiful remnants: remains of the book (as in 'all that remains').

Brian Busby said...

You remind me of Brian Busby, a slightly older boy who grew up a block away.

I can add a third John Clare, whose weak satire The Passionate Invaders was published in 1965 by Doubleday. Justifiably forgotten, I found it, appropriately, in a London, Ontario thrift shop (and wrote about it here).

For we Canadians, the most frequently encountered literary doppelganger is Richard B. Wright, whose novels have received many awards both at home (Giller and Governbor General's) and abroad (Faber Memorial Prize).

Jimmy said...

There's also a Welsh poet called Tony Curtis whose wife taught English in my school.

Edwin Moore said...

A notable confusion supposedly occurred between the poet Alasdair Maclean and the novelist Alistair Maclean. Roy Plomley is supposed to have wanted the latter for Desert Island Discs and invited the former by mistake. There is another version given by Pyle in Heroic Failures in which the wrong Maclean is the head of the Ontario Tourist Board -

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/columnists/richard-ingrams/richard-ingrams-when-those-in-power-abandon-all-scruples-2232979.html

Not sure which version is correct!

(The Daily Mail once called me a famous Scottish writer but they were thinking of Edwin Morgan)

Rosie said...

Robin Healey- "alleged poet"? I think he's a wonderful poet!

R.M.Healey said...

Incidentally, New Zealand's teacher-poet and woolly jumper fetishist, Robin Healey (b 1937), is now dead. RIP. See tribute page on Google.

Nicky Armstrong said...

My father Robin Healey, who wrote the collection In the Night Kitchen, published by Mallinson Rendall, was most certainly a poet. Not alleged.
Nicky Armstrong, nee Healey