William Somerset Maugham
William Somerset Maugham
William Somerset Maugham
William Somerset Maugham is one of the best known English writers of the 20th century. He was not only a
novelist, but also a one of the most successful dramatist and short-story writers.
He was born in Paris in 1874. His parents died when he was very young and the boy was brought up by his
uncle, clergyman. After his parents' death the boy was taken away from the French school which he had
attended, and went for his lessons daily to the apartment of the English clergyman at the church. At the age
of ten the boy was sent to England to attend school. In 1890 he went abroad and studied at the University
of Heidelberg from which he returned to England in 1892 and as his parents had destined him for the
medical profession, he became a medical student at St. Thomas's hospital in London. His experience in
treating the sick gave Maugham material for his first work "Lisa of Lambeth". After that, although he
became a fully qualified doctor, Somerset decided to devote his life to literature. "I didn't want to be a
doctor. I didn't want to be anything but a writer".
Soon after the publication of his first novel Maugham went to Spain and travelled widely to all parts of the
world. He visited Russia, America, Africa, Asia. The technique of the short story had always interested
Maugham. De Maupassant and Chekhov influenced him but he developed a form of a story that has
unmistakable Maugham's flavor.
Somerset Maugham has written 24 plays, 19 novels and a large number of short stories. The most mature
period of his life began in 1915, when he published one of his most popular novels.
Maugham wants the readers to draw his own conclusion about the characters and events described in his
novels. The most prominent works by Somerset Maugham are: "Cakes and Ale", "Theatre", and "The
Razor's Edge".
The titles of some of Maugham's early novels were familiar to a whole generation of readers: Of Human
Bondage (1915), The Moon and Sixpence (1919), Ashenden: or, The British Agent (1938), and Cakes and
Ale: or, The Skeleton in the Cupboard (1930). A later novel that had something of the same success was
The Razor's Edge (1944). Among his plays, perhaps best known and much produced was Rain (1922). An
early autobiography is The Summing Up (1938). Praised by some critics for his craftsmanship and
professionalism, he wrote much on the subject of fiction: EssaysGreat Novelists and Their Novels (1948);
A Writer's Notebook (1949); and The Art of Fiction (1955). His Travel Books appeared in 1955; The
Magician, A Novel, Together with a Fragment of Autobiography in 1956; and essays titled Points of View in
1958. In his last years he worked on an autobiography to be published posthumously.
Realistic portrayal of life, keen character observation, and interesting plots coupled with beautiful,
expressive language, simple and lucid style, place Somerset Maugham on a level with the greatest English
writers of the 20th century.