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Norman Lewis (author)

Norman Lewis
Born (1908-06-28)June 28, 1908
Forty Hill, Enfield
Died July 22, 2003(2003-07-22) (aged 95)
Saffron Walden, Essex
Nationality British
Occupation travel writer, novelist, journalist
Known for descriptions and defence of indigenous peoples

Norman Lewis (28 June 1908 – 22 July 2003) was an influential British journalist and a prolific author. Best known for his travel writing, he also wrote twelve novels and several volumes of autobiography.

Subjects he explored in his travel writing include life in Naples during the Allied liberation of Italy (Naples '44); Vietnam and French colonial Indochina (A Dragon Apparent); Indonesia (An Empire of the East); tribal peoples of India (A Goddess in the Stones); Sicily and the Mafia (The Honoured Society and In Sicily); and the destruction caused by Christian missionaries in Latin America and elsewhere (The Missionaries).

A newspaper article entitled "Genocide in Brazil" (1968) prompted the creation of Survival International—an organisation dedicated to the protection of indigenous peoples around the world.

Graham Greene described Lewis as "one of the best writers, not of any particular decade, but of our century".

Lewis was born in Forty Hill, Enfield, Middlesex, a suburb of London, and attended Enfield Grammar School. His parents were spiritualists and hoped young Lewis would grow up to become a medium; his father worked as a pharmacist. As a young man, Lewis tried a variety of ways to make a living in the Great Depression of the 1930s, including self-employed wedding photographer, auctioneer, umbrella wholesaler and briefly a motorcycle racer at Harringay Stadium and White City. For some years during this period, he set up home in Woodberry Down near Manor House


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