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Colin MacInnes
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Colin MacInnes (20 August 1914 – 22 April 1976) was an English novelist and journalist. He wrote his novels on black culture in England.
Key Information
Biography
[edit]MacInnes was born on 20 August 1914, in London, to singer James Campbell McInnes and novelist Angela Mackail, who was the granddaughter of the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones and also related to Rudyard Kipling and Stanley Baldwin. MacInnes's parents divorced in 1917.[1] His mother remarried and the family relocated to Australia in 1920,[2] living in Malvern, Melbourne.[1] He attended Scotch College and, for much of his childhood, was known as Colin Thirkell, the surname of his mother's second husband. He had an older brother, Graham McInnes, and a younger half-brother, Lance Thirkell.[1] At some point, he used his father's surname McInnes, afterwards changing it to MacInnes.[3]
MacInnes worked in Brussels from 1930 until 1935, then studied painting in London at the London Polytechnic school and the School of Drawing and Painting in Euston Road.[4]
MacInnes served in the British Intelligence Corps during World War II, and worked in occupied Germany after the European armistice. These experiences resulted in the writing of his first novel, To the Victors the Spoils. Soon after his return to England, he worked for BBC Radio until he could earn a living from his writing.[3][5]
MacInnes was the author of a number of books depicting London youth and black immigrant culture during the 1950s, in particular City of Spades (1957), Absolute Beginners (1959) and Mr Love & Justice (1960), known collectively as the "London trilogy".[6] Many of his books were set in the Notting Hill area of London, then a poor and racially mixed area. He was one of the first British authors to write about the black experience in England, as well as being one of the first to write about teenagers. A bisexual, he was one of the first to rationally write about homosexuality, which he called the "English Question"; he authored the pamphlet Loving Them Both in 1973.[5]
In his later life, MacInnes lived in Fitzrovia with Martin Green, his publisher, and Green's wife, Fiona.[4] He died on 22 April 1976, aged 61, in Kent,[7] from lung cancer.[5]
Bibliography
[edit]- To the Victor the Spoils (MacGibbon & Kee, 1950; Allison & Busby, 1986)
- June in Her Spring (MacGibbon & Kee, 1952; Faber & Faber, 2008)
- City of Spades (MacGibbon & Kee, 1957; Allison & Busby, 1980)
- Absolute Beginners (MacGibbon & Kee, 1959; Allison & Busby, 1980)
- Mr Love & Justice (MacGibbon & Kee, 1960; Allison & Busby, 1980)
- England, Half English (MacGibbon & Kee, 1961) – a collection of previously published journalism
- London, City of Any Dream (Thames & Hudson, 1962) – photo essay
- Australia and New Zealand (Time Life, 1964)
- All Day Saturday (MacGibbon & Kee, 1966)
- Sweet Saturday Night (MacGibbon & Kee, 1967) – a history of British musichall
- Westward to Laughter (MacGibbon & Kee, 1969)
- Three Years to Play (MacGibbon & Kee, 1970)
- Loving Them Both: A Study of Bisexuality (Martin Brian and O'Keeffe, 1973)
- Out of the Garden (HarperCollins, 1974)
- No Novel Reader (Martin Brian & O'Keeffe, 1975)
- Out of the Way: Later Essays (Martin Brian & O'Keeffe, 1980)
- Absolute MacInnes: The Best of Colin MacInnes (Allison & Busby, 1985)
- Fancy Free Unpublished novel (MS and typescript); gifted to Fiona Green, 1973
- Visions of London (MacGibbon & Kee 1969)
Further reading
[edit]- Gould, Tony. Inside Outsider: The Life and Times of Colin MacInnes. London: Allison and Busby, 1983.
- White, Jerry. "Colin MacInnes: 'Absolute Beginners' - 1959". London Fictions. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Serle, Geoffrey, "Colin Campbell McInnes (1914–1976)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 26 March 2024
- ^ Hall, Anne (2021). Angela Thirkell A Writer's Life. Unicorn. pp. 73–74.
- ^ a b archives.lib.rochester.edu https://archives.lib.rochester.edu/repositories/2/resources/890. Retrieved 17 October 2025.
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|title=(help) - ^ a b Tony Gould, Inside Outsider: The Life and Times of Colin MacInnes, Allison & Busby, 1983.
- ^ a b c "Chronicler of multicultural England". The Critic. 6 July 2025. Retrieved 17 October 2025.
- ^ "Writing 1950s London: Narratives Strategies in Colin MacInnes's City of Spades and Absolute Beginners". homepages.gold.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 18 December 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2025.
- ^ "Colin MacInnes". www.nndb.com. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
External links
[edit]- "Colin MacInnes's 'City of Spades'", article on the London Fictions site
- "The London of 'Absolute Beginners'" on the London Fictions site
- "Kilburn and Stepney in 'Mr Love and Justice'" on London Fictions
- Colin MacInnes Archived 28 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine at Allison & Busby.
- Nick Bentley, "Writing 1950s London: Narrative Strategies in Colin MacInnes's City of Spades and Absolute Beginners", article in Literary London Journal.
Colin MacInnes
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Family Background and Childhood
Colin MacInnes was born on 20 August 1914 in South Kensington, London, to James Campbell McInnes, a professional opera singer and baritone, and Angela Margaret Mackail, a future novelist whose father was the classicist J. W. Mackail and whose grandfather was the Pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones.[4][5][6] Through his maternal lineage, MacInnes was related to Rudyard Kipling and British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin.[4][6] He had an older brother, Graham Campbell McInnes (born 18 February 1912), who became a writer and diplomat, a sister who died in infancy, and a younger half-brother, Lance Thirkell (born around 1920–1921), from his mother's second marriage.[4][5][6] His parents divorced in 1917, after which his mother remarried in 1918 to Captain George L. A. Thirkell, a Tasmanian-born engineer, prompting the family's relocation to Malvern, Melbourne, Australia, in 1920.[5][6] During his childhood in Australia, MacInnes was known by his stepfather's surname, Thirkell, and lived in a household where his mother emphasized literary exposure through nightly readings.[5][6] The family later reverted to variations of the paternal surname, with MacInnes adopting the spelling "MacInnes" in adulthood.[4][6] MacInnes spent most of his formative years in Australia, engaging in activities such as Scouting and country holidays, which contrasted with his urban London birthplace and reflected the adaptive circumstances of his disrupted family life.[4][5] His father's career had taken him to Canada by 1919, limiting direct paternal influence, while his mother's emerging literary pursuits shaped the household's cultural environment amid the challenges of relocation and blended family dynamics.[6]Education and Formative Experiences
MacInnes was born on 20 August 1914 in London to Scottish tenor James Campbell McInnes and author Angela Mackail Thirkell, whose family included notable literary figures such as J.M. Barrie.[6] Following his parents' divorce around 1918, he relocated with his mother and siblings to Melbourne, Australia, in early 1920, where the family settled in the suburb of Malvern.[5] There, MacInnes and his brother Graham attended Scotch College, a prominent independent school, during their formative years, gaining exposure to Australian colonial society and outdoor life that later informed his outsider perspective on British culture.[5] In 1929, his mother returned to England with his youngest half-brother, but MacInnes remained in Australia initially before joining her in England in 1931 at age 17, marking a period of familial rupture as he soon broke ties with her.[6] [5] Seeking independence, he took up clerical work in an office in Brussels from approximately 1930 to 1935, an experience that exposed him to continental European influences and honed his adaptability amid economic instability in the interwar period.[6] Upon returning to London around 1935, MacInnes pursued studies in painting rather than formal university education, enrolling first at Chelsea Polytechnic and subsequently at the Euston Road School of Drawing and Painting, institutions emphasizing observational realism and figure drawing.[6] These art school years, spanning the mid-1930s, cultivated his keen eye for urban detail and social observation, skills that underpinned his later journalistic and novelistic depictions of London's undercurrents, though he did not complete a degree or exhibit professionally.[6] This phase, combined with his peripatetic youth across continents, fostered a self-described "inside outsider" sensibility, blending detachment with immersion in subcultures.[3]Personal Life
Relationships and Sexuality
MacInnes identified as bisexual and was among the earliest British writers to openly address homosexuality—termed by him the "English Question"—prior to its partial decriminalization in 1967.[2] His attractions encompassed both sexes, with documented homosexual encounters involving payment to hustlers and pickups of young men in public spaces such as Hyde Park.[3] These activities, conducted amid legal risks, reflected a predatory pattern noted by contemporaries, including a pronounced interest in black men framed through sexual exoticism.[3][2] In 1973, he published the pamphlet Loving Them Both: A Study of Bisexuality and Bisexuals, a 55-page exploration advocating rational acceptance of bisexuality and examining same-sex dynamics, including among African men.[2][7] This work aligned with his broader journalistic output on urban vice, though it drew limited academic engagement. No marriages or sustained romantic partnerships appear in biographical records; his personal life emphasized transient liaisons over domestic stability.[3][2]Later Years and Death
In the 1960s, MacInnes faced financial hardship, culminating in bankruptcy circa 1960, and continued living nomadically within London's bohemian underworld, where he immersed himself in rock music, alcohol, recreational drugs, and homosexual subcultures.[6][5] He traveled to Australia in 1964 on assignment for Time-Life, but a planned journey to Africa in 1971 failed to occur.[6][5] His later publications, including the novel All Day Saturday (1966), garnered less acclaim than his 1950s London Trilogy, reflecting a waning literary prominence.[5] Afflicted with esophageal cancer, MacInnes suffered a fatal hemorrhage on 22 April 1976 at Hythe, Kent, at age 61.[5][8] His body was buried at sea.[5][8]Journalism and Early Career
Art Criticism and Broadcasting
MacInnes contributed to art criticism in the post-war period, focusing on contemporary visual arts and engaging with London's gallery scene. In 1956, he visited Gallery One as an art critic, reflecting his interest in emerging artistic spaces and figures.[9] His writings extended to international artists, including an introduction to Sidney Nolan's oeuvre in 1961, where he framed Nolan's paintings within Australian mythology and landscape influences, emphasizing themes of myth and national identity.[10] Parallel to his print criticism, MacInnes worked in broadcasting, particularly for BBC Radio starting after World War II.[11] By 1955, he had established a role as a BBC art critic, blending commentary on visual culture with social observation during a period of expanding public discourse on modern art.[8] His radio contributions included discussions that intersected art with broader cultural topics, aligning with his freelance essayist pursuits and lectures on artistic developments.Initial Publications and Essays
MacInnes's debut novel, To the Victors Belong the Spoils, appeared in 1950 from MacGibbon & Kee, recounting experiences from his service in the British Army's intelligence corps during World War II, including field security operations across Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany.[12] The work drew directly from his wartime observations but received limited attention upon release. His second novel, June in Her Spring, followed in 1952, also published by MacGibbon & Kee; set in Australia during the early 1950s, it centers on a teenage girl's infatuation with an older man and subtly addresses themes of homosexuality amid post-war social constraints.[13] Parallel to these early fictions, MacInnes contributed journalistic essays to periodicals starting in the mid-1950s, often exploring London's evolving subcultures. Notable among these were pieces in Encounter and Twentieth Century, where he analyzed youth behaviors and urban transformations; for instance, his 1957 essay "Young England, Half English" critiqued the integration of immigrant influences into British teenage identity.[14] [15] Other works included "City after Dark" (1957), which depicted nocturnal London life, and essays on popular music's role in adolescent rebellion, such as "Pop Songs and Teenagers" (1958).[16] These writings, informed by his immersion in street-level observations rather than academic detachment, laid groundwork for his later non-fiction collections like England, Half English (1961), though contemporary reception varied due to their unconventional, firsthand style over polished analysis.Literary Works
The London Trilogy
The London Trilogy consists of three novels—City of Spades (1957), Absolute Beginners (1959), and Mr Love and Justice (1960)—that collectively portray facets of mid-20th-century London life amid post-war reconstruction, mass immigration from the Commonwealth, and the rise of distinct youth and subcultural scenes.[17] MacInnes drew from direct observation of London's Notting Hill district, a hub of racial mixing and social flux, to depict interactions among white working-class residents, newly arrived black immigrants, and emerging teenage cohorts, often highlighting tensions from rapid demographic shifts and economic disparities.[18] The works eschew didactic moralizing, instead presenting character-driven narratives that reveal causal links between policy-driven immigration, urban decay, and interpersonal conflicts without romanticizing outcomes.[19] City of Spades, the trilogy's opener, centers on Johnny Fortune, a Nigerian migrant navigating joblessness, housing shortages, and cultural dislocation upon arriving in London via boat trains at Victoria Station in the mid-1950s.[20] The narrative alternates perspectives between Fortune and Montgomery Pew, a white welfare officer entangled in the immigrant underclass, exposing frictions in areas like Notting Hill where overcrowding and petty crime proliferated among West Indian communities amid limited integration opportunities.[18] MacInnes details specific locales such as rundown tenements and informal economies, underscoring how government-encouraged postwar labor migration clashed with inadequate infrastructure, leading to events foreshadowing the 1958 Notting Hill race riots.[21] Absolute Beginners shifts to the nascent youth culture of 1958, narrated by an unnamed teenage freelance photographer who frequents Soho's jazz clubs, coffee bars, and dance halls, capturing the era's sartorial flair—teddy boy suits, existential slang—and economic independence via part-time gigs.[22] The plot weaves personal romance with broader unrest, including interracial tensions and a climactic riot, reflecting how affluence from reconstruction fueled teenage autonomy while exposing hypocrisies in adult society's racial attitudes and consumerism.[15] Over 208 pages, it documents precise cultural markers like American-influenced music scenes and parental generational divides, portraying youth not as delinquent but as a rational response to stifling conformity.[23] Mr Love and Justice examines London's vice economy through dual viewpoints: Edward Justice, a novice vice squad policeman enforcing laws on prostitution and gambling, and Mr Love, a philosophical black pimp operating in the same shadowed districts.[24] Published in 1960 by MacGibbon & Kee, the 232-page novel contrasts institutional rigidity—evident in Justice's procedural zeal—with the pragmatic survivalism of the underworld, including street-level transactions in areas affected by prior migration waves.[25] MacInnes illustrates causal dynamics where legal overreach intersects with economic desperation, driven by postwar black market legacies and immigration-fueled informal labor, without endorsing either side's ethics.[26] Collectively, the trilogy's 700-plus pages across editions map London's transformation from imperial hub to multicultural pressure cooker, with MacInnes' journalistic eye privileging street-level empirics over abstract ideology; later omnibus collections like The London Novels (1969) preserved this raw documentation.[27]Other Novels and Non-Fiction
MacInnes published his debut novel, To the Victors the Spoils, in 1950, a semi-autobiographical work drawing from his service as a sergeant in a Field Security detachment during World War II, depicting the experiences of British Army units advancing through Holland, Germany, and Belgium in the final months of the war.[28][29] His second novel, June in Her Spring, appeared in 1952 and is set in rural Australia, portraying the life of sixteen-year-old June Westley, who navigates family expectations and her romance with a young musician amid the isolation of the bush.[30][31] Later novels include All Day Saturday (1966), which explores a strained marriage and social dynamics in the Australian outback through the lens of weekly parties hosted by Helen Bailey at Cootamundra Station.[32][33] MacInnes ventured into historical fiction with Westward to Laughter (1969), an adventure narrative centered on young Alexander Nairn's encounters with slavery and piracy in the Caribbean.[34][35] He followed this with Three Years to Play in 1970, completing a pair of period novels.[36] Among his non-fiction, England, Half English (1961) collects essays reflecting on mid-20th-century British society, including observations on youth culture, race relations, and urban change.[37][38] London: City of Any Dream (1962) offers a series of vignettes capturing the diverse and evolving character of the British capital in the post-war era.[39] Sweet Saturday Night (1967) examines the tradition of British music halls, drawing on historical and cultural analysis of working-class entertainment.[40]Bibliography
-
Novels
- To the Victors the Spoils (MacGibbon & Kee, 1950)[40]
- June in Her Spring (MacGibbon & Kee, 1952)[40]
- City of Spades (MacGibbon & Kee, 1957)[40]
- Absolute Beginners (MacGibbon & Kee, 1959)[40]
- Mr Love and Justice (MacGibbon & Kee, 1960)[40]
- Westward to Laughter (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1969)[40]
- All Day Saturday (Cassell, 1966)[40]
- Three Years to Play (Constable, 1970)[40]
- Out of the Garden (Frewin, 1974)[40]
-
Non-fiction
- England, Half English (MacGibbon & Kee, 1961)[41]
- Out of the Way: Later Essays (M. Brian & O'Keeffe, 1979)[42]
- No Novel Reader (Martin Brian & O'Keeffe, 1975)[40]
-
Collections
- Absolute MacInnes (Faber & Faber, 1985)[36]
- The London Novels (Allison & Busby, 1969; reprints of the trilogy)[43]
