Alexander Larman


Alexander Larman is a British author, journalist and historian. Specialising in historical biography, he also writes regularly for The Times, The Observer, The Times Literary Supplement, The Spectator, the New Statesman, and the Daily Telegraph. His fourth book, The Crown In Crisis: Countdown to the Abdication, was published in July 2020.

Career

His first book, Blazing Star: The Life and Times of John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, was published in 2014, and led to a public dispute with the historian Cliff Davies. His second book, Restoration, a social history of the year 1666, was published in 2016. His third, Byron’s Women, came out in 2016 and was shortlisted for the Elma Dangerfield Prize. Larman is literary editor of The Chap magazine, and has been producing a compilation of historical biographies for them since 2017, titled The Rakes Progress. He is working on a biography of Peter O'Toole, and his fourth book, The Crown In Crisis: Countdown to the Abdication, an account of the Edward VIII abdication crisis of 1936, was published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in 2020.. It attracted significant global media attention due to Larman's discovery of new documents relating to the July 1936 assassination attempt on Edward VIII by George McMahon.

Reception

Writing in The Times, Matthew Denison writes, of Blazing Star, that "Larman is at pains to rescue his subject from his status as one-dimensional bad boy... He mostly succeeds," praising the book as "engagingly partisan and elegantly informative." In the Guardian, Ian Thomson states that though "The biography is not without its faults... Larman takes us through the high adventure of Rochester's life and loves" and "paints a picture of a great poet who flared brightly before burning out."
Writing on Restoration, Ben East similarly concludes that though it "perhaps lacks the depth that the period requires... is an accessible snapshot of Restoration England, which manages to give labourers and royalty equal billing."
Claire Kohnda Hazelton, in the Observer, noted that in Byron's Women "Larman explores not only each woman’s relationship with Byron but her ambitions, achievements and passions. Larman also sheds light upon Byron’s violent nature." She concludes that "This is no ordinary biography; through exploring the lives of the women in his life and the impressions he left upon them, we are offered an outline of Byron’s person, arguably more accurate, compelling and candid than any portrait focused on him and his poetry could be." Roger Lewis wrote in The Times that 'It isn’t a tiresome feminist rant, as from a pushy university lecturer, it is humane and brooks no balderdash. This radical questioning of the conventional swashbuckling Byronic stance is convincing.'

Personal life

Larman attended Winchester College and Regent's Park College, Oxford, where he read English and graduated with a First. His father-in-law was the Stirling Prize award-winning architect Will Alsop. He lives in Oxford with his wife and daughter, and collects antiquarian books.