Loom of Youth | Alec Waugh
Alec Waugh's autobiographical novel was a sensation when published for exposing the culture of bullying, laziness and homosexual coercion present in England's public schools. Although its revelations are couched in mild, even casual language, Waugh's novel lifts the veil on a doggedly traditional culture of English education. Set in the years prior to World War I, the Loom of Youth narrates the experiences of public school life. The plot is simply the depiction of day-to-day events, trials and struggles, from the ingrained customs of fagging and cricket to the physical and mental abuse frequently meted out by certain boys. Gordon Caruthers is the author's surrogate character, and it is through his narration - whereby the events of public school living are regarded as normal and largely unobjectionable - that a picture of the author's mentality is revealed. Alec Waugh published this novel at the age of seventeen shortly before his service in World War I; the tone of self-importance and self-regard imparted by English public school life lends authenticity to the narrative. Alec Waugh would go on to enjoy lifelong fame as a novelist, becoming an astute commentator on aspects of British life such as its declining colonial Empire and class system. As an early work, this novel represents the emergence of Waugh's authorly talents.