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  2. The ten-day visit changed Isherwood's life. He began an affair with a German boy whom he met at a cellar bar called The Cosy Corner, [16] and he was "brought face to face with his tribe" at Magnus Hirschfeld 's Institute for Sexual Science. [17] He visited Berlin again in July and relocated there in November.

  3. (She prodded him to write: when he was six or seven, she helped him assemble “The History of My Friends.”) When Isherwood was seven, his brother Richard was born.

  4. Isherwood wrote another novel, A Meeting by the River (1967), about two brothers, one about to take his final vows as a Ramakrishna monk and the other trying to dissuade him, but life itself had become so compelling that he gave up writing fiction and turned entirely to autobiography.

  5. Oct 16, 2010 · A decade later, Isherwood calculated that his bedmates and casual lays numbered "somewhere in the four hundreds", but in 1952 he met his archetypal American Boy, Don Bachardy. Isherwood was 48,...

  6. www.theatlantic.com › magazine › archiveDarling Me - The Atlantic

    Christopher Isherwood followed Oscar Wilde's prescription for lifelong romance by falling in love with himself—over and over again.

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  8. Apr 12, 2024 · Christopher Isherwood (born August 26, 1904, High Lane, Cheshire, England—died January 4, 1986, Santa Monica, California, U.S.) was a British-American novelist and playwright best known for his novels about Berlin in the early 1930s.

  9. Feb 20, 2020 · Angelica Frey. Updated on February 20, 2020. Christopher Isherwood (August 26, 1904—January 4, 1986) was an Anglo American author who wrote novels, autobiographies, diaries, and screenplays.

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