Graham
Greene was born on October 2, 1904, to Charles Henry
and Marion Raymond Greene. He was the fourth of six children.
Greene attended the Berkhamstead School, where his father was
the headmaster, and then Balliol College, Oxford. After graduation,
he became a journalist, and in 1926 he was appointed Sub Editor
for The Times. In that same year he became a Catholic.
Greene’s first
novel, The Man Within, was published in 1929. It was a success
with critics and readers. The Name of Action and Rumour at Nightfall,
his next two novels, did not fare so well, but Stamboul Train
(1932), his fourth novel, established his literary reputation.
During the 1930s,
Greene became book and later film reviewer for the magazine
The Spectator. He became a renowned film critic. His books during
this period included It's a Battlefield, England Made Me, A
Gun for Sale and Brighton Rock.
Greene also traveled
extensively, in Europe and Mexico. In Mexico during the winter
of 1937-38, he investigated the persecution of the Catholic
church. This resulted in two books, The Lawless Roads in March
1939, and The Power And The Glory, in September 1939. The latter
is regarded as one of Greene’s finest novels, and it was
awarded a major literary prize, The Hawthornden.
Greene first conceived
the idea for The Power and the Glory when a Mexican man told
him about a priest who had been so drunk at the baptism of the
man’s son that he had given the baby a girl’s name.
The priest had then disappeared into the mountains. Possibly
he had been killed by soldiers or he might have escaped.
During World War
II, Greene worked for the Ministry of Information In 1941 he
joined the British secret service and was assigned first to
Sierra Leone and then to counter-intelligence in London. Greene
left the service in May 1944.
After the war, Greene
collaborated with Carol Reed in writing a film, The Third Man,
which won First Prize at Cannes in 1949. In 1955, he wrote The
Quiet American, about American involvement in Indochina. More
novels followed, including Our Man In Havanna (1958), The Comedians
(1966), The Honorary Consul (1973), and The Human Factor (1978).
The latter stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for
six months.
Greene married Vivienne
Dayrell-Browning in 1927, with whom he had two children. The
couple separated in 1948 but never divorced. In the last years
of his life, Greene lived in Vevey, Switzerland, with his companion
Yvonne Cloetta. He died there on April 3, 1991. |