Posted on Oct 1, 1999

Adrian Frazier, professor of English, is about to

publish his work of 10 years, a biography of Irish writer George Moore

(Yale University Press, London), but not before he tells colleagues how he

did it.

Frazier will speak on his biography of Moore in a

faculty colloquium on Thursday, Oct. 7, at 11:30 a.m. in the Reamer

Auditorium. Lunch will follow in Hale House Dining Room.

Frazier said he chose Moore in part because he is one of

the only major figures in Irish literature not to have been treated in a

recent biography. The last major one, written by Joseph Hone only three

years after Moore's death in 1933, was a success that would ward off

others who would have followed in Hone's footsteps, Frazier said.

Moore was a bachelor said to have had relationships with

a number of women, some of them fairly famous and prominent, Frazier said.

Among them were Lady Cunard, who received thousands of letters from the

writer. Since many of Moore's letters were lost or destroyed, stories of

his relationship have to be re-created from fragments scattered throughout

collections in the U.K. and the U.S., Frazier said.

“In lots of peoples lives, we see family

stories,” Frazier said. “In Moore's, there is no family, only

a cadre of people who took the place of family members.”

Though identified as a major figure of Irish literature,

Moore repudiated national identity and found national boundaries to be

illusory, Frazier said. While at military school, he would look around the

classroom wondering on what battlefields his fellow classmates would meet

their fate, he said.

Moore, born in 1852, wrote A Modern Lover (1883),

A Mummer's Wife (1885), and his autobiographical Confessions

of a Young Man (1888) and Hail and Farewell (1911-1914), a

memoir of his years as a founding member of the Abbey Theatre.