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Michael BracewellMichael Bracewell
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BiographyWriter, novelist and cultural commentator Michael Bracewell was born in London in 1958. Educated at the University of Nottingham, he has worked for the British Council in London.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction, Non-fiction     BibliographyMissing Margate (novella) Fourth Estate, 1988 The Crypto-Amnesia Club Serpent's Tail, 1988 The Quick End (includes Bracewell's novella 'Missing Margate') Fourth Estate, 1988 Divine Concepts of Physical Beauty Secker & Warburg, 1989 The Conclave Secker & Warburg, 1992 Saint Rachel Cape, 1995 The Faber Book of Pop (contributor) Faber and Faber, 1995 England Is Mine: Pop Life in Albion from Wilde to Goldie HarperCollins, 1997 The Penguin Book of Twentieth-Century Fashion Writing (contributor) Viking, 1999 Perfect Tense Cape, 2001 The Nineties: When Surface was Depth Flamingo, 2002 Roxyism Flamingo, 2004 Roxy Music: Bryan Ferry, Brian Eno, Art, Ideas and Fashion Da Capo Press, 2005 Re-make/Re-model Faber and Faber, 2007 It is Not Only Rock'n Roll Baby! (with Jerome Sans) Actar, 2008 Roxy: The Band That Invented an Era Faber and Faber, 2008 The Midland Hotel (with Simon Webb and Sarah Hall) Dewi Lewis, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1992 Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (shortlist) The Conclave    
  Critical PerspectiveCritic, novelist and cultural voyeur, Michael Bracewell is a sort of non-celebrity Will Self. He shares with his more famous contemporary a vision of the world and a great breadth of reference, fuelled by an arresting, multi-faceted intelligence. He is impassioned, yet cold to the touch; deeply mocking, yet incredibly serious. His fiction takes metropolitan alienation as its theme. His characters are forced to examine themselves and the lives they lead, or else they face the prospect of falling under the oncoming wheels, their spirit-sustaining pills scattered to the wind.
Bracewell’s self-absorbed characters display a listless, restless, melancholic dissatisfaction with contemporary life. The unnamed narrator of Perfect Tense (2001) escapes the tired, grey inanities of his office and reinvents himself for a day of wandering as an urban anthropologist; in The Conclave (1992) Martin Knight is, in essence, absolutely ordinary, yet he desires nothing more than to be extraordinary; John White in Saint Rachel (1995) becomes reliant on a cocktail of medications and the sympathy of those around him, after suffering a breakdown following the failure of his marriage. But whilst this canvas, the neuroses of middle-class England, is one which is particularly popular for contemporary novelists, what marks Bracewell’s fiction out is the ever present sense of the strange; he paints with the oddest of brushes, with unexpected dabs of unusual colour which move him far from the conventional concerns of Islington and Hampstead. To an extent, Bracewell is to Middle England what David Lynch is to Middle America - his is a noticeably eloquent voice disguised by a surreal touch and a poetic sensibility. In Bracewell there is always an attempt to locate some kind of spiritual purpose, not so easy in a world that has lost God and found 24-hour rolling news, that lauds fame whilst ignoring talent.
In Missing Margate (1988), another novella, Max de Winter, the most famous architect in the country, is hounded by Designate, a new style magazine that wants to do a feature on him. (By the way, Max’s wife is called Rebecca. They have a country estate called New Manderlay. The names reveal the kind of arch humour that defines Bracewell.) Max is such a success that he is now either desperate not to be, or incapable of knowing what to do with it, depending on how we wish to read it. It is only by reclaiming his creations, the offices and towers with which he has resculpted the London skyline, that Max will be at peace. So he makes the decision to destroy his work, becoming in the process a very peculiar kind of urban terrorist.
Bracewell’s first novel, Divine Concepts of Physical Beauty (1989), is the most beguiling piece of work he has yet produced. Its exquisite, lyrically knowing and often very funny narration is reminiscent of that of John Hurt in Lars Von Trier’s masterpiece, Dogville. It also shares with that picture a fable-like quality. Miles Harrier is wealthy, handsome, of good, upper class stock and loved by three women. We follow him and those who love him, from adolescence to the small triumphs and pressing doubts of adulthood. The novel is about the failure of youthful dreams; it explores our ties to one another, how real they are, how vital, how self-serving. Bracewell examines desire and attacks the obsessive regard for the superficial, and he takes great pleasure in doing so. The chief delight of Divine Concepts of Physical Beauty is to be found not in character or plot, but in the very manner in which it is told - in its wicked asides and judgements.
Garan Holcombe, 2006  
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