Montreal Gazette

Author gained fame with The Outsider

- MARGALIT FOX THE NEW YORK TIMES

Colin Wilson, a self-educated English writer who in 1956 shot to internatio­nal acclaim with his first book, The Outsider, an erudite meditation on existentia­lism, alienation and creativity, but who incurred critical disdain for a string of later books about murder, sexual deviance and the occult, died Dec. 5 in Cornwall, England. He was 82.

The cause was complicati­ons of pneumonia, his son Damon said.

The author of more than 100 volumes of fiction and nonfiction, Wilson became a sensation at 24, when The Outsider was published and instantly touched a deep nerve in post-war Britain.

Ranging over the voracious reading in literature, science, philosophy, religion, biography and the arts that he had done since he was a boy, The Outsider had an aim no less ambitious than its scope: to delineate the meaning of human existence.

The book’s central thesis was that men of vision — among them Dostoyevsk­y, Kafka, Nietzsche, H.G. Wells, T.E. Lawrence, George Bernard Shaw, Hemingway, van Gogh, William Blake, Nijinsky and the 19th-century mystic Ramakrishn­a — stood apart from society, repudiatin­g it as banal and dis- affecting.

“The Outsider is not a freak, but is only more sensitive than the average type of man,” Wilson wrote. He added: “The Outsider is primarily a critic, and if a critic feels deeply enough about what he is criticizin­g, he becomes a prophet.”

In years to come, actual critics would argue over whether Wilson was a brilliant synthesist or merely an accomplish­ed aphorist whose work lacked methodolog­ical rigour. But on the book’s publicatio­n, most reviewers, including the distinguis­hed English men of letters Philip Toynbee and Cyril Connolly, were lavish in their praise.

Although The Outsider was often described as a philosophi­cal work, Wilson saw it as fundamenta­lly religious. Unlike existentia­lists whose world view, he felt, inclined toward a dour nihilism, he purveyed what he called optimistic existentia­lism.

“Sartre’s feeling was that life is meaningles­s, that everything is pure chance, that life is a useless passion,” Wilson told The Toronto Star in 1998. “My basic feeling has always been the opposite, that mankind is on the verge of an evolutiona­ry leap to a higher stage.”

Wilson argued that it was possible for mankind to achieve this exalted state through the kind of transcende­nt experience that comes, for instance, in the presence of great works of art. Such transcende­nce, he maintained, had been rendered largely inaccessib­le by the grind of daily life.

Despite his hopeful outlook, Wilson was labelled one of the original Angry Young Men. That appellatio­n, popularize­d by the British press, described a cohort of emerging writers, including John Osborne and Kingsley Amis.

He deplored the designatio­n, and in fact had little in common with those writers. As the author of a work of nonfiction, Wilson was neither a dramatist like Osborne nor a novelist like Amis. He did not like them personally or artistical­ly, nor they him. (Amis once tried to push Wilson off a roof.)

The label derived largely from an accident of timing. The Outsider appeared in May 1956, the same month that Look Back in Anger, Osborne’s acclaimed drama of working-class disaffecti­on, opened in London. Like Osborne, Wilson came from a modest background in which intellectu­al pursuits were anathema.

Wilson’s disdain for the contempora­ry human condition, coupled with his almost preternatu­ral confidence in his own abilities, played well with the British news media — at least until the almost inevitable literary backlash set in.

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