17 September 2011

The Last Colonial (Christopher Ondaatje)

'Christopher Ondaatje is a true child of the British Empire. Born in Ceylon in 1933 and brought up on a tea plantation, he was sent as a teenager to boarding school in England. But soon after Ceylon was granted its independence in 1948, his family found themselves destitute, and the young Ondaatje left school and got a job. In 1956 he made his way to Canada with just thirteen dollars in his pocket. From this improbable beginning there followed a series of commercial triumphs until 1988 when he abruptly abandoned high finance at the peak of his career and reinvented himself as an explorer and author, focusing mainly on the colonial period. It is the curious encounters behind these often precarious adventures that make up The Last Colonial. The stories tell of Ondaatje’s childhood days in Ceylon, his early life in Canada, his fascination with inexplicable events and local superstitions, and his sometimes perilous travels researching biographies of Ernest Hemingway in Africa, Leonard Woolf in Ceylon, and Sir Richard Burton in India and Africa. Illustrated throughout with original images by Ana Maria Pacheco, The Last Colonial lives up to the romance of its tantalizing title.'

The Last Colonial, Christopher Ondaatje (2011)

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

How do you pronounce that last name?

Laguna Beach Fogey said...

Anon @ 19:37 - I always pronounced it as "On-Dutch-y", which, given the dusky complexion of the Ondaatje brothers, I suspect some of the native Ceylonese women were at some point in the family's history.

La Sombra Sofisticada said...

Sounds like a great read!