Paul Bowles was an American writer, music composer, poet, translator and novelist
@Music Composer, Family and Childhood
Paul Bowles was an American writer, music composer, poet, translator and novelist
Paul Bowles born at
Paul Bowles got married to author Jane Auer in 1938. The couple did not have any children and according to most accounts, both of them were in relationships with individuals of the same sex.
He died due to heart failure on 18 November 1999, in Tangier, Morocco, at the age of 88.
Paul Bowles was born on 30 December 1910, in New York City, to Claude Dietz Bowles and his wife Rena. His father was a dentist and as such he had a comfortable childhood. However, his father was a dominating character and he shared a strained relationship with him.
He started writing stories at the age of four and before long he had also started writing poems which were surreal in nature. At the same time, he started taking an interest in music and that was abetted by his father’s collection of records. At the age of 17, he got his first break when a poem titled ‘Spire Song’ was published in the French publication named ‘Transition’.
In 1928, he enrolled in the University of Virginia but he discontinued his education and in April 1929, he went off to Paris, where he worked for the newspaper Paris Herald Tribune. In July 1929, he returned to New York and started working for Duttons Bookshop l in New York.
Upon repeated requests from his parents, he went back the University of Virginia but dropped out after a semester and went off to Paris with Aaron Copland, the noted American composer and writer, with whom he had been studying composition in New York.
In 1931, he produced his first composition titled ‘Sonata for Oboe and Clarinet’. In Paris, he befriended literary figures like Gertrude Stein and travelled to Tangiers and Berlin where he became acquainted with writers as well.
In 1937, he came back to New York and quickly emerged as one of the most popular music composers of his time. Over a period of the next 10 years or so, he collaborated with some of the leading artists of the era, such as, Orson Welles and Tennessee Williams. He worked as a composer for orchestra as well as for stage productions. During this period, he was employed as a music critic at the New York Herald Tribune.
In 1943, an opera created by him, titled ‘Wind Remains’ was performed. In the same year, he translated Jean-Paul Sartre’s ‘Huis Clos’ and the resultant play became a popular one that won plenty of accolades. Two years later, he wrote the short story ‘A Distant Episode’ that saw him going back to prose again.
Bowles was given an advance by publishers Doubleday for a novel and he used that money to move to Tangier, Morocco in 1947. The novel named ‘The Sheltering Sky’, set in North Africa, was published two years later and became an instant hit.
In 1950, he published a short story collection titled ‘A Littler Stone’ and his second novel ‘Let it Come Down’ was published two years later. His other work during the period include: ‘The Spider’s House’ (1955).
Among his staggering body of work in music and literature that was produced over a period of several decades, his first novel ‘The Sheltering Sky’ is regarded as his most important work. The book figured in the New York Times’ Best Seller list.