Christopher, like many other writers, was shockingly ignorant of the objective world, except where it touched his own experience. When he had to hide his ignorance beneath a veneer, he simply consulted someone who could supply him with the information he needed.


Isherwood refers to himself in the third person. p. 192 - Christopher and His Kind (1976)


Christopher, like many other writers, was shockingly ignorant of the objective world, except where it touched his own experience. When he had to hide ...

Christopher, like many other writers, was shockingly ignorant of the objective world, except where it touched his own experience. When he had to hide ...

Christopher, like many other writers, was shockingly ignorant of the objective world, except where it touched his own experience. When he had to hide ...

Christopher, like many other writers, was shockingly ignorant of the objective world, except where it touched his own experience. When he had to hide ...