A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Dr Linda Parker (http://www.linda-parker.co.uk/)
Robert Keable in his 1919 book about the Great War, Standing By: Wartime Reflections in France
and Flanders, wrote of his hopes for the chaplains after the war. ”It is inconceivable that they will not
make an upheaval; if they do not it will be one of the central disappointments of my life.”
Many of the chaplains did make significant contributions to the post war church and society, but
perhaps one who was most famous, possibly notorious, was Keable himself, whose post war life was a
fascinating mixture of achievement, happiness, sadness and scandal, dominated by the scandal cause
by his book Simon called Peter called by The British Weekly “Utterly Immoral “
In this book on Robert Keable the author has researched thoroughly the contradictory aspects of
Keable’s life leading to a relatively early death. The chapters of biography are interspersed interestingly
with the story of the publishing of the book and later books.
After starting his clerical career as a missionary in South Africa, he served as a chaplain to the South
African Native Labour Corps in France, and was vocal in standing up against the way they were treated ,
unlike other chaplains. Having left his wife in South Africa, while serving as a chaplain, he had an affair
with a nurse. This affair was mirrored in his book Simon called Peter which was to cause so much
scandal not only because of the relationship between the main characters and its racy depiction, but the
descriptions of the hedonistic life style enjoyed by some on leave. One review said that the book
“Reeks of drink and lust.”
After the war Keable lived with his mistress and eventually lost his faith and resigned from his priest
orders. After the tragic death of Jolie he remained on Tahiti where they had settled and Keable lived with
a Tahitian princess, Ina Salmon until his death in in 1927 .
Although Simon called Peter was a best seller and propelled Keable to fame particularly in America, He
wrote many more books, both religious works and fiction. The author takes us through the works and
their publishing. They are a fascinating insight into Keable’s development as an author and his ideas on
human love and faith in God.
This is a fascinating book, which shed light on the way in which war can change people including their
faith in human nature and in God, the standards of the interwar publishers and their audiences and
some interesting insights into colonial South Africa and life on interwar Tahiti .
The author has researched his topic with the benefit of a wide variety of primary and secondary
sources. With such a fine variety of sources the book could have been longer! It will be of interest to
many readers.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Mandy J, Reviewer for NetGalley
Written by his grandson, and meticulously researched, this biography of largely forgotten author Robert Keable is a wonderfully enlightening and absorbing account of an unconventional and unusual man and writer. His most notorious and controversial novel Simon Called Peter (also definitely worth reading) became a huge international best-seller and a real succès de scandale. Simon Keable-Elliot has done a stellar job in recounting his grandfather’s life and also provides intelligent and insightful analysis of his writings. Robert Keable is a real discovery for me, and I heartily recommend this well-written and engaging book.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Emi Y NetGalley Reviewer
My favorite thing about this thoroughly researched book was its title; I'd never heard of its subject before, author Simon Keable-Elliott's grandfather Robert Keable and his most famous book, Simon Called Peter. Simon Called Peter was about an English military chaplain's struggles with his religion, work, marriage, and maintaining loyalty to any of them. Its reputation due to bits of unprecedented naughtiness earned it plenty of acclaim and attention, but serious reviewers pointed out that readers interested only in the prurient parts were generally disappointed, citing "too much religion and too little passion". And I will admit I too found this book about that book a bit disappointing for their collective basis in religious faith, teachings and indoctrination. Keable's exotic travels (in Basutoland, France, Tahiti), romantic exploits, views on race and marriage, and publishing travails are fascinating, especially considering how short his lifespan and how much he managed to fit in. The Kindle version I read is missing several photos, but I enjoyed seeing the ones that were included.
It's none of my business but I'd so love to know how family members dealt with Robert Keable's eccentricities, fame and legacy.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Professor Ronald Hyam, Emeritus Fellow and former President of Magdalene College, Cambridge
I have read this and found it very good, a welcome and comprehensive account of a Magdalene man, famous in his day. An important book.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Amanda Jenkinson
Written by his grandson, and meticulously researched, this biography of largely forgotten author Robert Keable is a wonderfully enlightening and absorbing account of an unconventional and unusual man and writer. His most notorious and controversial novel Simon Called Peter (also definitely worth reading) became a huge international best-seller and a real succès de scandale. Simon Keable-Elliot has done a stellar job in recounting his grandfather’s life and also provides intelligent and insightful analysis of his writings. Robert Keable is a real discovery for me, and I heartily recommend this well-written and engaging book.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Nigel Cave for Western Front Association
This is a biography of author Robert Keable (1887-1927), who lived a short but quite extraordinary life that carried him from suburban Croydon to Tahiti, via Cambridge, southern African and the Western Front. Ordained as an Anglican priest, Keable was a chaplain attached to the South African Native Labour Contingent for about a year from mid 1917 to August 1918. Keable ministered to the SANLC at the communication ports of Rouen and Le Havre. A book he wrote on the unit whilst on leave in England in February 1918 never made it to the booksellers as it was deemed to fall foul of censorship regulations and was destroyed. No copies remain but we know that he was critical of the treatment of the SANLC and perhaps felt guilty that he had urged his parishioners to join it in the first place.
His time near the front lines was limited to a short stint at a dressing station; it is likely to have had a considerable impact on him, but it was not sufficient for him to lose his faith. He felt that, apart from the Roman Catholic chaplains, those of other Christian denominations might best be used in close conjunction with the work of the YMCA and similar organizations.
This wartime period of his life takes up directly about twenty pages of the book, though of course its influence is a running thread for much of it. Certainly it provided the backdrop and inspiration for his most famous book, Simon Called Peter (1920). This was a semiautobiographical work about a chaplain who falls in love with a nurse and is a tale of the conflict between faith and love. It became an enormous best-seller, going through multiple editions in the 1920s and becoming so famous that it was cited in The Great Gatsby and later turned into a Broadway show. It was also hugely controversial, with many libraries, especially in the USA, banning it and a Boston judge deeming it obscene. Its sequel, Recompense, was turned into a successful Hollywood film, though no prints of it remain.
Keable had returned to Africa in late 1919, left the priesthood then came back to England. The subsequent years were taken up with complex relationships with three women and several lengthy tours to promote his books of which he wrote several, though nothing competed with the sensation that was Simon Called Peter. He also went through agonies of belief, flirting with Roman Catholicism. This indecision of the nature of Jesus remained, perhaps, unresolved at the end, when he died a wealthy man in his Tahitian retreat.
This is a well written, easily readable book, though its structure is unusual. The standard chronological narrative of his life is not followed, rather it is intertwined with Simon Called Peter and its reception. Robert Keable was a most interesting man but understanding him and developing empathy is not necessarily easy. His experience of the war obviously affected him deeply but it was but one of several major influences in his life. If expecting a detailed account of a chaplain of the South African Native Labour Brigade in the Great War it will not be found here, but one will find a fascinating life and an informative commentary on the times and social mores of a very disturbed era in Western social and cultural history.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Dr Anne Samson - Historian
Review first appeared on Dr Anne samson's blog which can be found at https://thesamsonedhistorian.wordpress.com
As a result of my review of Simon Called Peter, Simon alerted me to the biography of his grandfather he’d recently had published: Utterly Immoral.
As many of my readers will know, I’m interested in what motivated a fiction author to write about the Great War in Africa, and what links they had. Rare has it been that a whole detailed biography examining the very book in question appears. This was one of those rare moments.
What was striking, at least for me, was that Robert Keable was ostracised and criticised for his having a priest challenge his purpose and being tempted by a prostitute. In contrast to the thinking of the 1920s, I thought it very enlightened and honest – ahead of its time.
Reading Simon Called Peter, I had a suspicion it was fairly autobiographical but wasn’t sure where the common threads were. Simon made these connections and more.
One of the things that really struck me reading Utterly Immoral is how our lives can be and are shaped by those around us irrespective of how much we might resist their influence. If you don’t fit the accepted mould, doors close. Robert, however, found or made opportunities to do things differently. He moved with the love of his life to a new country where they could live without the criticism and closed-minded attitudes of those who were supposedly their own. Intolerance is cruel, leading to discrimination and exclusion.
It’s interesting to see how Robert saw this in the black-white relationships within the SANLC (South African Native Labour Corps), an issue he commented on but which then was glossed over. Today, his observations hit a chord – that of ethnic discrimination based on skin colour.
Robert’s outspokenness on issues of discrimination, his honest or open attitude to searching for answers and the meaning of life and work, challenging the norm and accepted mores and beliefs, is what got him into trouble 100 years ago. Today, Western society wouldn’t bat an eyelid at his personal life. But yet, we still judge and discriminate against those who think and behave differently. How much was Robert reflecting the society he lived in through his writing and how much did he influence the change in attitude as people clandestinely read his novels?
Simon goes as far as one can in trying to understand Robert’s motivations and reactions throughout his life. All credit to Simon for a balanced and informative insight into the life of a family member who was not seen as one of the heroes of the day.
In addition to the social and cultural insights the life of Robert Keable introduces us to, it opens a window on the world of publishing – what motivates a publisher to back a book or author, the risks they take and the role they play(ed) in an author’s life. In some ways, no different to today. Robert’s behaviour influenced the publishers, whose decisions in turn impacted Robert.
Utterly Immoral: Robert Keable and his scandalous novel is well worth a read for the light it shines on a past time, challenging us today as we see the impact of the gatekeepers of communal attitudes on a single life.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Alice - verified purchase on Amazon
Utterly Immoral follows the life of Robert Keable, the author of an incredibly controversial book - Simon Called Peter - and the fallout after publication. The life of Keable is incredibly interesting, from his literary works to his work in Besotholand, and gives a real insight into his experiences and the autobiographical nature of his novels. I would highly recommend this book to anybody with a keen interest in literary history!
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Susan J, reviewer for NetGalley
Robert Keable, born into an Evangelical family, was fated to follow his father into the Anglican Church. But he was, even as a youngster, someone with a mind of his own and by the time he was in University, he had already dismissed the evangelical bent and was questioning his faith and where he could best use it. He went as a missionary to Africa and was a man ahead of his time in how he viewed the native people. But it was when he convinced and then accompanied them to France during WWI, their treatment and the brutality of war made him question everything.
He’d been a writer already but the book he wrote- Simon Called Peter- not only created the final schism from his life as a minister but shocked the reading public. Utterly immoral was what F Scott Fitzgerald called it. And it was something very modern in its themes and storyline. What would have shocked even more was the story was autobiographical. Utterly Immoral is written by his grandson and tells the story of his short but colourful life. It follows his journey all over the world, living common law with his mistresses and marching to his own drummer.
He lived two lives, one traditional and public; the other was unconventional but private. He was an unusual man for his time and his story is quite compelling. Four purrs and two paws up. .
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Gail, C, book reviewer for NetGalley
I was drawn to read Utterly Immoral as I knew nothing about Robert Keable and I was curious about this unconventional person.
Overall, there are some hidden gems of information in this book. Keable's first hand accounts of being in Africa as a young clergyman are refreshingly honest. His struggles with his convictions were real, and proved to be so overwhelming that he changed the course of his life. The war experience is also very interesting, and remarkable that he made such remarks and was not banished into obscurity. He painted soldiers and war life without the brutal fighting.
Most of the book is a discussion of his books. The one that sets his career into a staggering direction is the controversial Simon Called Peter. Without having read the book, the book seems to have caused a stir in the literary world and gotten Robert on the road to being a writer, and certainly a well paid one as time went on.
The book also discussed his personal life, his wife, the other women and his time in Tahiti where he seemed very happy until his early passing.
There is too much information on all the reviews of his books, and the back and forth with his editors on publishing rights, money and where the book would be a movie, a play etc. It got redundant for me, and I wish it concentrated more on his decisions about his children and his wives.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Louise G, book reviewer for NetGalley
Even if you know nothing of the subject's work, this is a fascinating book which spans many fascinating contexts. The author explores in detail all aspects of the subject's life and does not shy away from difficult or challenging topics.
A review for 'Utterly Immoral', by Robin P Reviewer for NetGalley
Everyone who loves English literature should already know who Robert Keable was. For those who don't: he was a parish priest, missionary in Africa, chaplain during World War One, an inspiring teacher, and for many years a closet Catholic, but he is best remembered as the author of a saucy novel which caused a big stir in the 1920s.
Keable's grandson has written a thoroughly researched book with honesty and compassion and it is much more than just a biography with important reappraisals of Keable's novels and the context in which they were received. The details of life in Africa and Tahiti a century ago are particularly well written and fascinating. A book for all true book lovers.