This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2017/jul/07/letter-heathcote-williams-obituary
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Letter: Heathcote Williams obituary | Letter: Heathcote Williams obituary |
(7 months later) | |
Malcolm Ritchie | |
Fri 7 Jul 2017 17.50 BST | |
Last modified on Mon 27 Nov 2017 20.32 GMT | |
Share on Facebook | |
Share on Twitter | |
Share via Email | |
View more sharing options | |
Share on LinkedIn | |
Share on Pinterest | |
Share on Google+ | |
Share on WhatsApp | |
Share on Messenger | |
Close | |
I first met Heathcote Williams in the early 1960s, just as his brilliant book The Speakers was published. I had sent a piece of writing to the Transatlantic Review, where he was an editor, which was, to my amazement, accepted. | I first met Heathcote Williams in the early 1960s, just as his brilliant book The Speakers was published. I had sent a piece of writing to the Transatlantic Review, where he was an editor, which was, to my amazement, accepted. |
About three weeks later, there was a ring on my front doorbell in Cornwall, and there stood a young man of my own age with a head of electrically effervescent hair, wearing a brown pinstripe suit with flared trousers, who introduced himself in a transatlantic accent: “Hi, I’m Heathcote Williams from the Transatlantic Review.” | About three weeks later, there was a ring on my front doorbell in Cornwall, and there stood a young man of my own age with a head of electrically effervescent hair, wearing a brown pinstripe suit with flared trousers, who introduced himself in a transatlantic accent: “Hi, I’m Heathcote Williams from the Transatlantic Review.” |
He had a magnetic, mercurial quality. We fell out for a couple of decades, during which time I lived in America and Japan. On my return to the UK, one afternoon the telephone rang, and a voice on the other end said: “Who’s this, then?” Of course, I knew instantly who it was. With his generosity of heart, he had reconnected, and we carried on as though one of us had merely passed from one room to another, and back again. | He had a magnetic, mercurial quality. We fell out for a couple of decades, during which time I lived in America and Japan. On my return to the UK, one afternoon the telephone rang, and a voice on the other end said: “Who’s this, then?” Of course, I knew instantly who it was. With his generosity of heart, he had reconnected, and we carried on as though one of us had merely passed from one room to another, and back again. |
Heathcote Williams | |
obituaries | |
Share on Facebook | |
Share on Twitter | |
Share via Email | |
Share on LinkedIn | |
Share on Pinterest | |
Share on Google+ | |
Share on WhatsApp | |
Share on Messenger | |
Reuse this content |