The Curmudgeon-Online

Author Biography.


Aldous Huxley (1894 - 1963)

Writer. Born July 26, 1894, in Godalming, England, into a prominent family. His grandfather, T.H. Huxley, was a famous biologist and proponent of Darwin, and his father, Leonard Huxley, was a respected biographer. Huxley hoped to become a scientist like his grandfather, but his dreams were shattered when a medical condition robbed him of most of his site while he was a student at Eton.

Barely able to read, Huxley nevertheless graduated from Oxford in 1916, the same year his first book appeared. The following year, he began teaching at Eton, where one of his pupils was Eric Blair, who would later use the pen name George Orwell. Huxley's near-blindness disqualified him from service in World War I. From 1919-1921, he edited a publication called Athenaeum. In 1919, he married and had one son. The family moved to Italy in 1920, and lived most of the next several decades there while traveling widely. His satirical novels Crome Yellow (1921) and Antic Hay (1923) were successful, and he wrote full-time for the rest of his life, churning out 47 books and many articles, essays and screenplays.

Huxley's 1928 book Point Counterpoint became a bestseller, and in 1932 he published his masterwork, Brave New World, which he wrote in four months. The book paints a dark vision of a future where individual emotion, creativity and impulse have been completely subordinated to the tyrannical state.

In 1937, Huxley moved to Los Angeles, California, where he became a screenwriter. His screenplays include Pride and Prejudice (1940), starring Laurence Olivier, and Jane Eyre (1944). In the 1950s, Huxley became a proponent of the controlled use of psychedelic drugs to liberate the mind. He wrote two books about his experiences using LSD and mescaline under supervision: The Doors of Perception (inspiring the name of rock group The Doors) and Heaven and Hell. Huxley's first wife died in 1955, and he remarried in 1956. His 1962 novel Island envisioned a utopian society where psychedelic drugs are used for religious rituals. Huxley died in Los Angeles in 1963.



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