''In His Own Write'' is a 1964
nonsense
Nonsense is a form of communication, via speech, writing, or any other formal logic system, that lacks any coherent meaning. In ordinary usage, nonsense is sometimes synonymous with absurdity or the ridiculous. Many poets, novelists and songwri ...
book by the English musician
John Lennon
John Winston Ono Lennon (born John Winston Lennon; 9 October 19408 December 1980) was an English singer-songwriter, musician and activist. He gained global fame as the founder, co-lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist of the Beatles. Lennon's ...
. Lennon's first book, it consists of poems and short stories ranging from eight lines to three pages, as well as illustrations.
After Lennon showed journalist Michael Braun some of his writings and drawings, Braun in turn showed them to
Tom Maschler
Thomas Michael Maschler (16 August 193315 October 2020) was a British publisher and writer. From 1960, he was influential as the head of publishing company Jonathan Cape over a period of more than three decades. Maschler was noted for institutin ...
of publisher
Jonathan Cape
Jonathan Cape is a British publishing firm headquartered in London and founded in 1921 by Herbert Jonathan Cape, who was head of the firm until his death.
Cape and his business partner Wren Howard (1893–1968) set up the publishing house in ...
, who signed Lennon in January 1964. He wrote most of the content expressly for the book, though some stories and poems had been published years earlier in the
Liverpool
Liverpool is a port City status in the United Kingdom, city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. It is situated on the eastern side of the River Mersey, Mersey Estuary, near the Irish Sea, north-west of London. With a population ...
music publication ''
Mersey Beat
''Mersey Beat'' was a music publication in Liverpool, England in the early 1960s. It was founded by Bill Harry, who was one of John Lennon's classmates at Liverpool Art College. The paper carried news about all the local Liverpool bands, and ...
''. Lennon's writing style is informed by his interest in English writer
Lewis Carroll
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet, mathematician, photographer and reluctant Anglicanism, Anglican deacon. His most notable works are ''Alice ...
, while humorists
Spike Milligan
Terence Alan "Spike" Milligan (16 April 1918 – 27 February 2002) was an Irish comedian, writer, musician, poet, playwright and actor. The son of an English mother and Irish father, he was born in British Raj, British India, where he spent his ...
and
"Professor" Stanley Unwin inspired his sense of humour. His illustrations imitate the style of cartoonist
James Thurber
James Grover Thurber (December 8, 1894 – November 2, 1961) was an American cartoonist, writer, humorist, journalist, and playwright. He was best known for his gag cartoon, cartoons and short stories, published mainly in ''The New Yorker'' an ...
. Many of the book's pieces consist of private meanings and
in-joke
An in-joke, also known as an inside joke or a private joke, is a joke with humour that is understandable only to members of an ingroup; that is, people who are ''in'' a particular social group, occupation, or other community of shared interest ...
s, while also referencing Lennon's interest in physical abnormalities and expressing his anti-authority sentiments.
The book was both a critical and commercial success, selling around 300,000 copies in Britain. Reviewers praised it for its imaginative use of
wordplay and favourably compared it to the later works of
James Joyce
James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (born James Augusta Joyce; 2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic. He contributed to the modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influentia ...
, though Lennon was unfamiliar with him. Later commentators have discussed the book's prose in relation to Lennon's songwriting, both in how it differed from his contemporary writing and in how it anticipates his later work, heard in songs like "
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band''. It was written primarily by John Lennon with assistance from Paul McCartney, and credited to the Len ...
" and "
I Am the Walrus
"I Am the Walrus" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 television film ''Magical Mystery Tour (film), Magical Mystery Tour''. Written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney, it was released as the B-side to ...
". Released amidst
Beatlemania
Beatlemania was the fanaticism surrounding the English rock band the Beatles from 1963 to 1966. The group's popularity grew in the United Kingdom in late 1963, propelled by the singles " Please Please Me", "From Me to You" and " She Loves Yo ...
, its publication reinforced perceptions of Lennon as "the smart one" of the Beatles, and helped to further legitimise the place of
pop music
Pop music is a genre of popular music that originated in its modern form during the mid-1950s in the United States and the United Kingdom.S. Frith, W. Straw, and J. Street, eds, ''iarchive:cambridgecompani00frit, The Cambridge Companion to Pop ...
ians in society.
Since its release, the book has been translated into several languages. In 1965, Lennon released another book of nonsense literature, ''
A Spaniard in the Works
''A Spaniard in the Works'' is a nonsense book by English musician John Lennon, first published on 24 June 1965. The book consists of nonsensical stories and drawings similar to the style of his previous book, 1964's ''In His Own Write''. The na ...
''. He abandoned plans for a third collection and did not publish any other books in his lifetime.
Victor Spinetti and
Adrienne Kennedy adapted his two books into a one-act play, ''The Lennon Play: In His Own Write'', produced by the
National Theatre Company and first performed in June 1968 to mixed reviews.
Background
Earliest influences
John Lennon
John Winston Ono Lennon (born John Winston Lennon; 9 October 19408 December 1980) was an English singer-songwriter, musician and activist. He gained global fame as the founder, co-lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist of the Beatles. Lennon's ...
was artistic as a child, though unfocused on his schooling. He was mostly raised by his aunt
Mimi Smith, an avid reader who helped shape the literary inclinations of both Lennon and his step-siblings. Answering a questionnaire in 1965 about which books made the largest impression on him before the age of eleven, he identified
Lewis Carroll
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet, mathematician, photographer and reluctant Anglicanism, Anglican deacon. His most notable works are ''Alice ...
's
nonsense
Nonsense is a form of communication, via speech, writing, or any other formal logic system, that lacks any coherent meaning. In ordinary usage, nonsense is sometimes synonymous with absurdity or the ridiculous. Many poets, novelists and songwri ...
works ''
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' (also known as ''Alice in Wonderland'') is an 1865 English Children's literature, children's novel by Lewis Carroll, a mathematics university don, don at the University of Oxford. It details the story of a ...
'' and ''
Through the Looking-Glass
''Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There'' is a novel published in December 1871 by Lewis Carroll, the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a mathematics lecturer at Christ Church, Oxford, Christ Church, University of Oxford. I ...
'', as well as
Kenneth Grahame
Kenneth Grahame ( ; 8 March 1859 – 6 July 1932) was a British writer. He is best remembered for the classic of children's literature ''The Wind in the Willows'' (1908). Born in Scotland, he spent most of his childhood with his grandmother in ...
's children's book ''
The Wind in the Willows
''The Wind in the Willows'' is a children's novel by the British novelist Kenneth Grahame, first published in 1908. It details the story of Mole, Ratty, and Badger as they try to help Mr. Toad, after he becomes obsessed with motorcars and get ...
''. He added: "These books made a great impact and their influence will last for the rest of my life". He reread Carroll's books at least once a year, being intrigued by the use of
wordplay in pieces like "
Jabberwocky
"Jabberwocky" is a Nonsense verse, nonsense poem written by Lewis Carroll about the killing of a creature named "the Jabberwock". It was included in his 1871 novel ''Through the Looking-Glass'', the sequel to ''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' ...
". His childhood friend
Pete Shotton
Peter Shotton (4 August 1941 – 24 March 2017) was an English businessman. He was known for creating the Fatty Arbuckle's chain of restaurants and for his long friendship with John Lennon of the Beatles; he played the washboard (musical instr ...
remembered Lennon reciting the poem "at least a few hundred times", and that, "from a very early age, John's ultimate ambition was to one day 'write an ''Alice'' himself". Lennon's first ever poem, "The Land of the Lunapots", was a fourteen-line piece written in the style of "Jabberwocky", using
Carrollian words like "wyrtle" and "graftiens". Where Carroll's poem opens Twas brillig, and the...", Lennon's begins:
T'was custard time and as I
Snuffed at the haggie pie pie
The noodles ran about my plunk
Which rode my wrytle uncle drunk
...
From around the age of eight, Lennon spent much of his time drawing, inspired by cartoonist
Ronald Searle
Ronald William Fordham Searle (3 March 1920 – 30 December 2011) was an English artist and satirical cartoonist, comics artist, sculptor, medal designer and illustrator. He is perhaps best remembered as the creator of St Trinian's School and f ...
's work in the
St Trinian's School
''St Trinian's'' is a British gag cartoon comic strip series, created and drawn by Ronald Searle from 1946 until 1952. The cartoons all centre on a boarding school for girls, where the teachers are sadists and the girls are juvenile delinquent ...
cartoon strips. He later enjoyed the illustrations of cartoonist
James Thurber
James Grover Thurber (December 8, 1894 – November 2, 1961) was an American cartoonist, writer, humorist, journalist, and playwright. He was best known for his gag cartoon, cartoons and short stories, published mainly in ''The New Yorker'' an ...
and began imitating his style around the age of fifteen. Uninterested in
fine art
In European academic traditions, fine art (or, fine arts) is made primarily for aesthetics or creative expression, distinguishing it from popular art, decorative art or applied art, which also either serve some practical function (such as ...
and unable to create realistic likenesses, he enjoyed doodling and drawing witty cartoons, usually made with either a black pen or a
fountain pen
A fountain pen is a writing instrument that uses a metal nib (pen), nib to apply Fountain pen ink, water-based ink, or special pigment ink—suitable for fountain pens—to paper. It is distinguished from earlier dip pens by using an internal r ...
with black ink. Filling his school notebooks with vignettes, poetry and cartoons, he drew inspiration from British humorists such as
Spike Milligan
Terence Alan "Spike" Milligan (16 April 1918 – 27 February 2002) was an Irish comedian, writer, musician, poet, playwright and actor. The son of an English mother and Irish father, he was born in British Raj, British India, where he spent his ...
and
"Professor" Stanley Unwin, including Milligan's
radio comedy
Radio comedy, or comedy, comedic radio programming, is a radio broadcast that may involve variety show, sitcom elements, sketch comedy, sketches, and various types of comedy found in other media. It may also include more surreal or fantastic elemen ...
programme ''
The Goon Show
''The Goon Show'' is a British radio comedy programme, originally produced and broadcast by the BBC Home Service from 1951 to 1960, with occasional repeats on the BBC Light Programme. The first series, broadcast from 28 May to 20 September ...
''. He admired the programme's unique humour, characterised by attacks on
establishment figures,
surreal humour
Surreal humour (also called surreal comedy, absurdist humour, or absurdist comedy) is a form of humour predicated on deliberate violations of causality, causal reasoning, thus producing events and behaviors that are obviously illogical. Portra ...
and punning wordplay, later writing that it was "the only proof that the WORLD was insane". Lennon collected his work in a school exercise book dubbed the ''Daily Howl'', later described by Lennon's bandmate
George Harrison
George Harrison (25 February 1943 – 29 November 2001) was an English musician, singer and songwriter who achieved international fame as the lead guitarist of the Beatles. Sometimes called "the quiet Beatle", Harrison embraced Culture ...
as "jokes and
avant-garde
In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
poetry". Made in the style of a newspaper, its cartoons and ads featured wordplay and gags, such as a column reporting: "Our late editor is dead, he died of death, which killed him".
Despite Lennon's love of literature, he was a chronic misspeller, saying in a 1968 interview that he "never got the idea of spelling", finding it less important than conveying an idea or story. Beatles historian
Mark Lewisohn
Mark Lewisohn (born 16 June 1958) is an English historian and biographer. Since the 1980s, he has written many reference books about the Beatles and has worked for EMI, MPL Communications and Apple Corps. raises the possibility that Lennon had
dyslexia
Dyslexia (), previously known as word blindness, is a learning disability that affects either reading or writing. Different people are affected to different degrees. Problems may include difficulties in spelling words, reading quickly, wri ...
– a condition that often went undiagnosed in the 1940s and 1950s – but counters that he exhibited no other related symptoms. Lennon's mother,
Julia Lennon
Julia Lennon (''née'' Stanley; 12 March 1914 – 15 July 1958) was the mother of English musician John Lennon, who was born during her marriage to Alfred Lennon. After complaints to Liverpool's Social Services by her eldest sister Mimi Smi ...
, similarly wrote with uncertain spelling and displayed weak grammar in her writing. American professor James Sauceda contends that Unwin's use of fractured English was the foremost influence on Lennon's writing style, and in a 1980 interview with ''
Playboy
''Playboy'' (stylized in all caps) is an American men's Lifestyle journalism, lifestyle and entertainment magazine, available both online and in print. It was founded in Chicago in 1953 by Hugh Hefner and his associates, funded in part by a $ ...
'', Lennon stated that the main influences on his writing "were always Lewis Carroll and ''The Goon Show'', a combination of that".
Art college and Bill Harry
Although most teachers at
Quarry Bank High School for Boys were annoyed at Lennon's lack of focus, he impressed his English master, Philip Burnett, who suggested he go to art school at the
Liverpool College of Art
Liverpool College of Art has an unbroken history dating back to 1825, making it the oldest English school of art outside London. From 1883 it was located at 68 Hope Street, Liverpool, England, in a building designed by Thomas Cook, which is no ...
. In 2006, Burnett's wife, June Harry, recalled of Lennon's cartoons: "I was intrigued by what I saw. They weren't academic drawings but hilarious and quite disturbing cartoons." She continued: "Phil enjoyed John's slant on life. He told me, 'He's a bit of a one-off. He's bright enough, but not much apart from music and doing his cartoons interests him. Having failed his
GCE "O" levels, Lennon was admitted into the Liverpool College of Art solely on the basis of his art portfolio. While attending the school he befriended fellow student
Bill Harry
William Harry (born 17 September 1938) is the creator of ''Mersey Beat'', a newspaper of the early 1960s which focused on the Liverpool music scene. Harry had previously started various magazines and newspapers, such as ''Biped'' and ''Premier ...
in 1957. When Harry heard that Lennon wrote poetry he asked to see some, later recalling: "He was embarrassed at first... I got the impression that he felt that writing poetry was a bit effeminate because he had this tough macho image". After further pressing, Lennon relented and showed Harry a poem, who remembered it as "a rustic poem, it was pure British humour and comedy, and I loved it". Harry retrospectively stated that Lennon's writing style, especially his use of
malapropism
A malapropism (; also called a malaprop, acyrologia or Dogberryism) is the incorrect use of a word in place of a word with a similar sound, either unintentionally or for comedic effect, resulting in a nonsensical, often humorous utterance. An exam ...
s, reminded him of Unwin. Harry described his poetry as displaying an "originality in its sheer lunacy", but found his sense of humour "absurdly cruel with its obsession with
cripples,
spastics and torture".
After Harry started the Liverpool newspaper ''
Mersey Beat
''Mersey Beat'' was a music publication in Liverpool, England in the early 1960s. It was founded by Bill Harry, who was one of John Lennon's classmates at Liverpool Art College. The paper carried news about all the local Liverpool bands, and ...
'' in 1961, Lennon made occasional contributions. His column "Beatcomber", a reference to the "Beachcomber" column of the ''
Daily Express
The ''Daily Express'' is a national daily United Kingdom middle-market newspaper printed in Tabloid (newspaper format), tabloid format. Published in London, it is the flagship of Express Newspapers, owned by publisher Reach plc. It was first ...
'', included poems and short stories. He typed his early pieces with an
Imperial Good Companion Model T
typewriter
A typewriter is a Machine, mechanical or electromechanical machine for typing characters. Typically, a typewriter has an array of Button (control), keys, and each one causes a different single character to be produced on paper by striking an i ...
. By August 1962, his original typewriter was either broken or unavailable to him. He borrowed an acquaintance's, spurring him to write more prose and poetry. He enjoyed typewriters, but found that his slow typing left him unmotivated to write for long periods of time and so he focused on shorter pieces. He left
keystroke errors uncorrected to add further wordplay. Excited about being in print, he brought 250 pieces to Harry, telling him he could publish whatever he wanted of them. Only two stories were published, "Small Sam" and "On Safairy with Whide Hunter", because Harry's fiancée Virginia accidentally threw out the other 248 during a move between offices. Harry later recalled that after telling him about the accident, Lennon broke down in tears.
Paul McCartney
Lennon's friend and bandmate
Paul McCartney
Sir James Paul McCartney (born 18 June 1942) is an English singer, songwriter and musician who gained global fame with the Beatles, for whom he played bass guitar and the piano, and shared primary songwriting and lead vocal duties with John ...
also enjoyed ''Alice in Wonderland'', ''The Goon Show'' and the works of Thurber, and the two soon bonded through their mutual interests and similar senses of humour. Lennon impressed McCartney, who did not know anyone else that either owned a typewriter or wrote their own poetry. He found hilarious one of Lennon's earliest poems, "The Tale of Hermit Fred", especially its final lines:
I peel the bagpipes for my wife
And cut all negroes' hair
As breathing is my very life
And stop I do not dare.
Visiting Lennon's
251 Menlove Avenue
251 Menlove Avenue is the childhood home of the Beatles' John Lennon. Located in the Woolton suburb of Liverpool, it was named Mendips after the Mendip Hills. The Grade II listed building is preserved by the National Trust.
Residence of John L ...
home one day in July 1958, McCartney found him writing a poem and enjoyed the wordplay of lines like "a cup of teeth" and "in the early owls of the morecombe". Lennon let him help, with the two co-writing the poem "On Safairy with Whide Hunter", its title's origin likely the adventure
serial ''
White Hunter''. Lewisohn suggests the renaming of the lead character at each appearance was probably Lennon's contribution, while lines that were likely McCartney's include: "Could be the Flying Docker on a case" and "No! But mable next week it will be my turn to beat the bus now standing at platforbe nine". He also suggests the character Jumble Jim was a reference to McCartney's father Jim McCartney. Lennon typically wrote his pieces by hand at home and would bring them when he and his band,
the Beatles
The Beatles were an English Rock music, rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. The core lineup of the band comprised John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr. They are widely regarded as the Cultural impact of the Beatle ...
, were travelling in a car or van to a gig. Reading the pieces aloud, McCartney and Harrison would often make contributions of their own. Upon returning home, Lennon would type up the pieces, adding what he could remember of his friend's contributions.
Publication and content
In 1963,
Tom Maschler
Thomas Michael Maschler (16 August 193315 October 2020) was a British publisher and writer. From 1960, he was influential as the head of publishing company Jonathan Cape over a period of more than three decades. Maschler was noted for institutin ...
, the literary director of
Jonathan Cape
Jonathan Cape is a British publishing firm headquartered in London and founded in 1921 by Herbert Jonathan Cape, who was head of the firm until his death.
Cape and his business partner Wren Howard (1893–1968) set up the publishing house in ...
, commissioned American journalist Michael Braun to write a book about the Beatles. Braun began following the band during their
Autumn 1963 UK Tour in preparation for his 1964 book ''
Love Me Do: The Beatles' Progress''. Lennon showed Braun some of his writings and drawings, and Braun in turn showed them to Maschler, who recalled: "I thought they were wonderful and asked him who wrote them. When he told me John Lennon, I was immensely excited." At Braun's insistence, Maschler joined him and the band at Wimbledon Palais in
London
London is the Capital city, capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of both England and the United Kingdom, with a population of in . London metropolitan area, Its wider metropolitan area is the largest in Wester ...
on 14 December 1963. Lennon showed Maschler more of his drawings, mainly doodles made on scrap pieces of paper that had mostly been done in July 1963 while the Beatles played a residency in
Margate
Margate is a seaside resort, seaside town in the Thanet District of Kent, England. It is located on the north coast of Kent and covers an area of long, north-east of Canterbury and includes Cliftonville, Garlinge, Palm Bay, UK, Palm Bay and W ...
. Maschler encouraged him to continue with his pieces and drawings, then selected the title ''In His Own Write'' from a list of around twenty prospects, the pick originally an idea of McCartney. Among the rejected titles were ''In His Own Write and Draw'', ''The Transistor Negro'', ''Left Hand Left Hand'' and ''Stop One and Buy Me''.
Lennon signed a contract with Jonathan Cape for the book on 6 January 1964, receiving an advance of £1,000 (). He contributed 26 drawings and 31 pieces of writing, including 23
prose
Prose is language that follows the natural flow or rhythm of speech, ordinary grammatical structures, or, in writing, typical conventions and formatting. Thus, prose ranges from informal speaking to formal academic writing. Prose differs most n ...
pieces and eight poems, bringing the book's length to 80 pages. Its pieces range in length from the eight-line poems "Good Dog Nigel" and "The Moldy Moldy Man" to the three-page story "Scene three Act one". Lennon reported that his work on the book's illustrations was the most drawing he had done since leaving art school. Most of the written content was new, but some had been done previously, including the stories "On Safairy with Whide Hunter" (1958), "Henry and Harry" (1959), "Liddypool" (1961 as "Around And About"), "No Flies on Frank" (1962) and "Randolf's Party" (1962), and the poem "I Remember Arnold" (1958), which he wrote following the death of his mother, Julia. Lennon worked spontaneously and generally did not return to pieces after writing them, though he did revise "On Safairy with Whide Hunter" in mid-July 1962, adding a reference to the song "
The Lion Sleeps Tonight", a hit in early 1962. Among the book's literary references are "I Wandered", which includes several plays on the title of the poem "
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" by English poet
William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth (7 April 177023 April 1850) was an English Romantic poetry, Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romanticism, Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication ''Lyrical Balla ...
; "Treasure Ivan", which is a variation on the plot of ''
Treasure Island
''Treasure Island'' (originally titled ''The Sea Cook: A Story for Boys''Hammond, J. R. 1984. "Treasure Island." In ''A Robert Louis Stevenson Companion'', Palgrave Macmillan Literary Companions. London: Palgrave Macmillan. .) is an adventure a ...
'' by
Robert Louis Stevenson
Robert Louis Stevenson (born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson; 13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, essayist, poet and travel writer. He is best known for works such as ''Treasure Island'', ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll ...
; and "At the Denis", which paraphrases a scene at a dentist's office from Carlo Barone's English-teaching book, ''A Manual of Conversation English-Italian''.
''In His Own Write'' was published in the UK on 23 March 1964, retailing for 9
s 6
d ().
[, quoted in .] Lennon attended a launch party at Jonathan Cape's London offices the day before. Maschler refused a request from his superiors at Jonathan Cape that the cover depict Lennon holding a guitar, instead opting for a simple
head shot
A head shot or headshot is a photographic portrait in which the focus is on the subject's face. The term is usually applied to professional profile images on social media, images used on online dating profiles, and promotional images of actors, ...
. Photographer
Robert Freeman designed the first edition of the book, a black-and-white photograph he took of Lennon also adorning the cover. The back cover includes a humorous autobiography of Lennon, "About the Awful", again written in his unorthodox style. The book became an immediate best-seller, selling out on its first day. Only 25,000 copies of the first edition were printed, necessitating several reprints, including two in the last week of March 1964 and five more by January 1965. In its first ten months, the book sold almost 200,000 copies, eventually reaching around 300,000 copies bought in Britain.
Simon & Schuster
Simon & Schuster LLC (, ) is an American publishing house owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts since 2023. It was founded in New York City in 1924, by Richard L. Simon and M. Lincoln Schuster. Along with Penguin Random House, Hachette Book Group US ...
published ''In His Own Write'' in the US on 27 April 1964, retailing for US$2.50 (). The American edition was identical to the British, except that publishers added the caption "''The Writing Beatle!''" to the cover. The book was a best-seller in the US, where its publication took place around two months after the Beatles' first visit to the country and amid
Beatlemania
Beatlemania was the fanaticism surrounding the English rock band the Beatles from 1963 to 1966. The group's popularity grew in the United Kingdom in late 1963, propelled by the singles " Please Please Me", "From Me to You" and " She Loves Yo ...
, the hysteria that surrounded the group.
Contributions by the other Beatles
McCartney contributed an introduction to ''In His Own Write'', writing that its content was nonsensical yet funny. In 1964 interviews, Lennon said that two pieces were co-authored with McCartney. Due to a publishing error only "On Safairy with Whide Hunter" was marked as such – being "
itten in conjugal with Paul" – the other piece remaining unidentified.
Beatles drummer
Ringo Starr
Sir Richard Starkey (born 7 July 1940), known professionally as Ringo Starr, is an English musician, songwriter and actor who achieved international fame as the drummer for the Beatles. Starr occasionally sang lead vocals with the group, us ...
, prone to incorrect wordings and
malapropism
A malapropism (; also called a malaprop, acyrologia or Dogberryism) is the incorrect use of a word in place of a word with a similar sound, either unintentionally or for comedic effect, resulting in a nonsensical, often humorous utterance. An exam ...
s – dubbed "Ringoisms" by his bandmates – may have contributed a line to the book. Finishing up after a long day, perhaps 19 March 1964, he commented "it's been a hard day", and, on noticing it was dark, added s night" ("it's been a hard day's night"). While both Lennon and Starr later identified the phrase as Starr's, Lewisohn raises doubts that the phrase originated with him. He writes that if the 19 March dating is correct, that places it after Lennon had already included it in the story "Sad Michael", with the line "He'd had a hard days night that day". By 19 March, copies of ''In His Own Write'' had already been printed. Lewisohn suggests that Starr may have previously read or heard it in Lennon's story, while journalist
Nicholas Schaffner
Nicholas Schaffner (January 28, 1953 – August 28, 1991) was an American non-fiction author, journalist, and singer-songwriter.
Biography
Schaffner was born in Manhattan to John V. Schaffner (1913–1983), a literary agent whose clients includ ...
simply writes the phrase originated with Lennon's poem. Beatles biographer
Alan Clayson suggests the phrase's inspiration was
Eartha Kitt
Eartha Mae Kitt (née Keith; January 17, 1927 – December 25, 2008) was an American singer and actress. She was known for her highly distinctive singing style and her 1953 recordings of "C'est si bon" and the Christmas novelty song "Santa Baby" ...
's 1963 song "I Had a Hard Day Last Night", the
B-side
The A-side and B-side are the two sides of phonograph record, vinyl records and Compact cassette, cassettes, and the terms have often been printed on the labels of two-sided music recordings. The A-side of a Single (music), single usually ...
of her single "Lola Lola". After director
Dick Lester suggested ''A Hard Day's Night'' as the title of
the Beatles' 1964 film,
[, quoted in .] Lennon used it again in the
song of the same name.
Reception

''In His Own Write'' received critical acclaim, with favourable reviews in London's ''
The Sunday Times
''The Sunday Times'' is a British Sunday newspaper whose circulation makes it the largest in Britain's quality press market category. It was founded in 1821 as ''The New Observer''. It is published by Times Newspapers Ltd, a subsidiary of N ...
'' and ''
The Observer
''The Observer'' is a British newspaper published on Sundays. First published in 1791, it is the world's oldest Sunday newspaper.
In 1993 it was acquired by Guardian Media Group Limited, and operated as a sister paper to ''The Guardian'' ...
''. Among the most popular poems in the collection are "No Flies on Frank", "Good Dog Nigel", "The Wrestling Dog", "I Sat Belonely" and "Deaf Ted, Danoota, (and me)". ''
The Times Literary Supplement
''The Times Literary Supplement'' (''TLS'') is a weekly literary review published in London by News UK, a subsidiary of News Corp.
History
The ''TLS'' first appeared in 1902 as a supplement to ''The Times'' but became a separate publication ...
'' reviewer wrote that the book "is worth the attention of anyone who fears for the impoverishment of the English language and British imagination". In ''
The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', Harry Gilroy admired the writing style, describing it as "like a Beatle possessed", while
George Melly
Alan George Heywood Melly (17 August 1926 – 5 July 2007) was an English jazz and blues singer, critic, writer, and lecturer. From 1965 to 1973, he was a film and television critic for ''The Observer''; he also lectured on art history, with an ...
for ''The Sunday Times'' wrote: "It is fascinating of course to climb inside a Beatle's head to see what's going on there, but what really counts is that what's going on there really is fascinating." The ''
Virginia Quarterly Review
The ''Virginia Quarterly Review'' is a quarterly literary magazine that was established in 1925 by James Southall Wilson, at the request of University of Virginia president E. A. Alderman. This ''"National Journal of Literature and Discussio ...
'' called the book "a true delight" that finally gave "those intellectuals who have become stuck with Beatlemania... a serious literary excuse for their visceral pleasures".
Gloria Steinem
Gloria Marie Steinem ( ; born March 25, 1934) is an American journalist and social movement, social-political activist who emerged as a nationally recognized leader of second-wave feminism in the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s. ...
opined in a December 1964 profile of Lennon for ''
Cosmopolitan
Cosmopolitan may refer to:
Internationalism
* World citizen, one who eschews traditional geopolitical divisions derived from national citizenship
* Cosmopolitanism, the idea that all of humanity belongs to a single moral community
* Cosmopolitan ...
'' that the book showed him to be the only one of the band who had "signs of a talent outside the hothouse world of musical fadism and teenage worship".
Though Lennon had never read him, comparisons to Irish writer
James Joyce
James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (born James Augusta Joyce; 2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic. He contributed to the modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influentia ...
were common. In his review of the book, author
Tom Wolfe
Thomas Kennerly Wolfe Jr. (March 2, 1930 – May 14, 2018)Some sources say 1931; ''The New York Times'' and Reuters both initially reported 1931 in their obituaries before changing to 1930. See and was an American author and journalist widely ...
mentions Spike Milligan as an influence, but writes that the "imitations of Joyce" were what "most intrigued the
literati" in America and England: "the mimicry of prayers,
liturgies
Liturgy is the customary public ritual of worship performed by a religious group. As a religious phenomenon, liturgy represents a community, communal response to and participation in the sacred through activities reflecting praise, thanksgiving, ...
, manuals and grammars, the mad
homonym
In linguistics, homonyms are words which are either; '' homographs''—words that mean different things, but have the same spelling (regardless of pronunciation), or '' homophones''—words that mean different things, but have the same pronunciat ...
s, especially biting ones such as 'Loud' for 'Lord', which both
oyce and Lennonuse". In a favourable review for ''
The Nation
''The Nation'' is a progressive American monthly magazine that covers political and cultural news, opinion, and analysis. It was founded on July 6, 1865, as a successor to William Lloyd Garrison's '' The Liberator'', an abolitionist newspaper ...
'',
Peter Schickele drew comparison to
Edward Lear
Edward Lear (12 May 1812 – 29 January 1888) was an English artist, illustrator, musician, author and poet, who is known mostly for his literary nonsense in poetry and prose and especially his limerick (poetry), limericks, a form he popularised. ...
, Carroll, Thurber and Joyce, adding that even those "with a predisposition toward the Beatles" will be "pleasantly shocked" when reading it. ''
Time
Time is the continuous progression of existence that occurs in an apparently irreversible process, irreversible succession from the past, through the present, and into the future. It is a component quantity of various measurements used to sequ ...
'' cited the same influences before admiring the book's
typography
Typography is the art and technique of Typesetting, arranging type to make written language legibility, legible, readability, readable and beauty, appealing when displayed. The arrangement of type involves selecting typefaces, Point (typogra ...
, written "as if pages had been set by a drunken
linotypist". ''
Newsweek
''Newsweek'' is an American weekly news magazine based in New York City. Founded as a weekly print magazine in 1933, it was widely distributed during the 20th century and has had many notable editors-in-chief. It is currently co-owned by Dev P ...
'' called Lennon "an heir to the Anglo-American tradition of nonsense", but found that the constant Carroll and Joyce comparisons were faulty, emphasising instead Lennon's uniqueness and " spontaneity". Bill Harry published a review in the 26 March 1964 issue of ''Mersey Beat'', written as a
parody
A parody is a creative work designed to imitate, comment on, and/or mock its subject by means of satire, satirical or irony, ironic imitation. Often its subject is an Originality, original work or some aspect of it (theme/content, author, style, e ...
of Lennon's style. In an accompanying "translation" of his review, he predicted that while it would "
most certaintly... be a best seller", it could lend itself to controversy, with newer Beatles fans likely to be "puzzled by its way-out, off beat and sometimes sick humour".
One of the few negative responses to the book came from the
Conservative
Conservatism is a cultural, social, and political philosophy and ideology that seeks to promote and preserve traditional institutions, customs, and values. The central tenets of conservatism may vary in relation to the culture and civiliza ...
Member of Parliament Charles Curran. On 19 June 1964, during a
House of Commons
The House of Commons is the name for the elected lower house of the Bicameralism, bicameral parliaments of the United Kingdom and Canada. In both of these countries, the Commons holds much more legislative power than the nominally upper house of ...
debate on
automation
Automation describes a wide range of technologies that reduce human intervention in processes, mainly by predetermining decision criteria, subprocess relationships, and related actions, as well as embodying those predeterminations in machine ...
, he quoted the poem "Deaf Ted, Danoota, (and me)", then spoke derisively about the book, arguing that Lennon's verse was a symptom of a poor education system. He suggested that Lennon was "in a pathetic state of near-literacy", adding that "
seems to have picked up bits of
Tennyson
Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson (; 6 August 1809 – 6 October 1892) was an English poet. He was the Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom, Poet Laureate during much of Queen Victoria's reign. In 1829, Tennyson was awarded the Chancellor's ...
,
Browning, and
Robert Louis Stevenson
Robert Louis Stevenson (born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson; 13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, essayist, poet and travel writer. He is best known for works such as ''Treasure Island'', ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll ...
while listening with one ear to the
football
Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kick (football), kicking a football (ball), ball to score a goal (sports), goal. Unqualified, football (word), the word ''football'' generally means the form of football t ...
results on the
wireless
Wireless communication (or just wireless, when the context allows) is the transfer of information (''telecommunication'') between two or more points without the use of an electrical conductor, optical fiber or other continuous guided transm ...
." The most unfavourable review of the book came from critic
Christopher Ricks
Sir Christopher Bruce Ricks (born 18 September 1933) is a British literary critic and scholar. He is the William M. and Sara B. Warren Professor of the Humanities at Boston University (US), co-director of the Editorial Institute at Boston ...
, who wrote in ''
New Statesman
''The New Statesman'' (known from 1931 to 1964 as the ''New Statesman and Nation'') is a British political and cultural news magazine published in London. Founded as a weekly review of politics and literature on 12 April 1913, it was at first c ...
'' that anyone unaware of the Beatles would be unlikely to draw pleasure from the book.
Reactions of Lennon and the Beatles
While the success of ''In His Own Write'' pleased Lennon, he was surprised by both the attention it received and its positive reception. In a 1965 interview, he admitted to purchasing all the books that critics compared to his, including one by Lear, one by
Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer ( ; – 25 October 1400) was an English poet, author, and civil servant best known for ''The Canterbury Tales''. He has been called the "father of English literature", or, alternatively, the "father of English poetry". He w ...
and ''
Finnegans Wake
''Finnegans Wake'' is a novel by Irish literature, Irish writer James Joyce. It was published in instalments starting in 1924, under the title "fragments from ''Work in Progress''". The final title was only revealed when the book was publishe ...
'' by Joyce. He further stated that he did not see the similarities, except "
erhapsa little bit of ''Finnegans Wake''... but anybody who changes words is going to be compared". In a 1968 interview, he said that reading ''Finnegans Wake'' "was great, and I dug it and felt as though
oycewas an old friend", though he found the book difficult to read in its entirety.
Among Lennon's bandmates, Starr did not read the book, but Harrison and McCartney enjoyed it. Harrison stated in February 1964 that the book included "some great
ags, and Lennon recalled McCartney was especially fond of the book, being "dead keen" about it. In Beatles manager
Brian Epstein
Brian Samuel Epstein ( ; 19 September 1934 – 27 August 1967) was an English music entrepreneur who managed the Beatles from 1961 until his death in 1967.
Epstein was born into a family of successful retailers in Liverpool, who put hi ...
's 1964 autobiography ''
A Cellarful of Noise'', he commented: "I was deeply gratified that a Beatle could detach himself from Beatleism and create such impact as an author". Beatles
producer George Martin
Sir George Henry Martin (3 January 1926 – 8 March 2016) was an English record producer, arranger, composer, conductor, and musician. He was commonly referred to as the "fifth Beatle" because of his extensive involvement in each of the Beatle ...
– a fan of ''The Goon Show'' – and his wife Judy Lockhart-Smith similarly enjoyed Lennon's writings, with Martin calling them "terribly funny". In an August 1964 interview, Lennon identified "Scene three Act one" as his favourite piece in the book.
Foyle's Literary Luncheon
Following the book's publication,
Christina Foyle, the founder of
Foyles
Foyles, a trading name of Waterstones Booksellers Limited (formerly W & G Foyle Ltd.), is a bookseller with a chain of seven stores in England. It is best known for its flagship store in Charing Cross Road, London. Foyles was once listed in ...
bookshop, honoured Lennon at one of Foyle's Literary Luncheons.
Osbert Lancaster
Sir Osbert Lancaster (4 August 1908 – 27 July 1986) was an English cartoonist, architectural historian, stage designer and author. He was known for his cartoons in the British press, and for his lifelong work to inform the general publi ...
chaired the event on 23 April 1964 at the
Dorchester hotel in London. Among around six hundred attendees were several eminent guests, including Helen Shapiro, Yehudi Menuhin and Wilfrid Brambell. Hungover from a night spent at the Ad Lib Club, Lennon admitted to a journalist at the event that he was "scared stiff". He was reluctant to perform the expected speech, getting Epstein to advise luncheon organisers Foyle and Ben Perrick the day before the event that he would not be speaking. The two were taken aback, but assumed that Lennon meant he would only provide a short speech.
At the event, after Lancaster introduced him, Lennon stood and only said: "Uh, thank you very much, and God bless you. You've got a lucky face." Foyle was irritated, while Perrick recalls there was "some slight feeling of bewilderment" among attendees. Epstein gave a speech to avoid further disappointing any diners that had hoped to hear from Lennon. In ''A Cellarful of Noise'', Epstein expressed of Lennon's lack of a speech: "He was not prepared to do something which was not only unnatural to him, but also something he might have done badly. He was not going to fail." Perrick reflects that Lennon retained the affection of his audience due to his "charm and charisma", with attendees still happily queuing afterwards for signed copies.
Analysis
Against Lennon's songwriting
Later commentators have discussed the book's prose in relation to Lennon's songwriting, both in how it differed from his contemporary writing and in how it anticipates his later work. Writer Chris Ingham describes the book as "Surrealism, surreal poetry", displaying "a darkness and bite... that was light years away from 'I Want to Hold Your Hand. Professor of English Ian Marshall describes Lennon's prose as "mad wordplay", noting the Lewis Carroll influence and suggesting it anticipates the lyrics of later songs like "
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 album ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band''. It was written primarily by John Lennon with assistance from Paul McCartney, and credited to the Len ...
" and "
I Am the Walrus
"I Am the Walrus" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 television film ''Magical Mystery Tour (film), Magical Mystery Tour''. Written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney, it was released as the B-side to ...
". Critic Tim Riley (music critic), Tim Riley compares the short story "Unhappy Frank" to "I Am the Walrus", though he calls the former "a good deal more oblique and less cunning".
Walter Everett (musicologist), Walter Everett describes the book as including "Joycean dialect substitutions, Carrollian portmanteau words, and rich-sounding stream-of-consciousness Double entendre, double-entendre". Unlike Carroll, Lennon generally did not create new words in his writing, but instead used
homonym
In linguistics, homonyms are words which are either; '' homographs''—words that mean different things, but have the same spelling (regardless of pronunciation), or '' homophones''—words that mean different things, but have the same pronunciat ...
s (such as ''grate'' for ''great'') and other Phonology, phonological and Morphology (linguistics), morphological distortions (such as ''peoble'' for ''people''). Both Everett and Beatles researcher Kevin Howlett discuss the influence of ''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' and ''Through the Looking-Glass'' on both of Lennon's books and on the lyrics for "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds". Everett singles out the poems "Deaf Ted, Danoota, (and me)" and "I Wandered" as examples of this influence, quoting an excerpt from "I Wandered" to illustrate this:
Past grisby trees and hulky builds
Past ratters and bradder sheep
...
Down hovey lanes and stoney claves
Down ricketts and stickly myth
In a fatty hebrew gurth
I wandered humply as a sock
To meet bad Bernie Smith In his book ''Can't Buy Me Love (book), Can't Buy Me Love'', Jonathan Gould compares the poem "No Flies on Frank" to Lennon's 1967 song "Good Morning Good Morning", seeing both as illustrating the "dispirited domestic milieu" of "protagonists [who] drag themselves through the day 'crestfalled and defective. Everett suggests that while the character Bungalow Bill in Lennon's 1968 song "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" is generally understood to be a portmanteau of Jungle Jim and Buffalo Bill, the name also could have its origins in the character Jumble Jim from Lennon and McCartney's short story "On Safairy with Whide Hunter".
On 23 March 1964 – the same day the book was published in the UK – Lennon went to Lime Grove Studios, West London, to film a segment promoting it. The BBC programme ''Tonight (1957 TV programme), Tonight'' broadcast the segment live, with presenters Cliff Michelmore, Derek Hart and Kenneth Allsop reading excerpts. A four-minute interview between Allsop and Lennon followed, with Allsop challenging him to try using similar wordplay and imagination in his songwriting. Similar questions about the banality of his song lyrics – including from musician Bob Dylan – became common following the publication of his book, pushing him to write deeper, more introspective songs in the years that followed. In a December 1970 interview with Jann Wenner of ''Rolling Stone'', Lennon explained that early in his career he made a conscious split between writing
pop music
Pop music is a genre of popular music that originated in its modern form during the mid-1950s in the United States and the United Kingdom.S. Frith, W. Straw, and J. Street, eds, ''iarchive:cambridgecompani00frit, The Cambridge Companion to Pop ...
for public consumption and the expressive writing found in ''In His Own Write'', with the latter representing "the personal stories... expressive of my personal emotions". In his 1980 ''Playboy'' interview, he recalled the Allsop interview as being the impetus for his writing "In My Life". Writer John C. Winn mentions songs like "I'm a Loser", "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away" and "Help! (song), Help!" as exemplifying Lennon's move to deeper writing in the year after the book. Music scholar Terence O'Grady describes the "surprising twists" of Lennon's 1965 song "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" as more similar to ''In His Own Write'' than his earlier songs, and Sauceda mentions several of Lennon's later Beatles songs – including "I Am the Walrus", "What's the New Mary Jane", "Come Together", "Dig a Pony" – as demonstrating his ability for "sound-sense writing", where words are assembled not for their meaning but instead for their rhythm and for "the joy of sound".
James Sauceda and ''Finnegans Wake''
Sauceda produced the only comprehensive study of Lennon's writings in his 1983 book ''Literary Lennon: A Comedy of Letters'', providing a postmodern dissection of both ''In His Own Write'' and Lennon's next book of nonsense literature, ''
A Spaniard in the Works
''A Spaniard in the Works'' is a nonsense book by English musician John Lennon, first published on 24 June 1965. The book consists of nonsensical stories and drawings similar to the style of his previous book, 1964's ''In His Own Write''. The na ...
''. Everett describes the book as "a thorough but sometimes wrongheaded postmodern ''Finnegans Wake''-inspired parsing". Sauceda, for example, casts doubt on Lennon's claim that he had never read Joyce before writing ''In His Own Write''. He suggests that the lines "he was debb and duff and could not speeg" and "Practice daily but not if you are Mutt and Jeff" from the pieces "Sad Michael" and "All Abord Speeching", respectively, were influenced by a passage from ''Finnegans Wake'' discussing whether someone is Hearing loss, deaf or deaf-mute, reading: Author Peter Doggett is even more dismissive of Sauceda than Everett, criticising Sauceda for missing references to British popular culture. In particular, he mentions the analysis of the story "The Famous Five Through Woenow Abbey", wherein Sauceda concludes that the Famous Five of the story refers to Epstein and the Beatles, but does not mention the popular British children's novels ''The Famous Five (novel series), The Famous Five'', written by Enid Blyton – referred to as "Enig Blyter" in Lennon's story. Riley calls Sauceda's insights "keen", but suggests more can be understood by analysing the works with reference to Lennon's biography. Gould comments that ''The Goon Show'' was Lennon's closest experience to the style of ''Finnegans Wake'', and describes Milligan's 1959 book ''Silly Verse for Kids'' as "the direct antecedent to ''In His Own Write''."
Against Lennon's biography
Before he signed with Jonathan Cape, Lennon wrote prose and poetry to keep for himself and share with his friends, leaving his pieces filled with private meanings and
in-joke
An in-joke, also known as an inside joke or a private joke, is a joke with humour that is understandable only to members of an ingroup; that is, people who are ''in'' a particular social group, occupation, or other community of shared interest ...
s. Quoted in a February 1964 piece in ''Mersey Beat'', Harrison said with regard to the book that "[t]he 'with-it' people will get the gags and there are some great ones". Lewisohn states that Lennon based the story "Henry and Harry" on an experience of Harrison, whose father gifted him electrician's tools for Christmas Day, Christmas 1959, implying he expected his son to become an electrician despite Harrison's disagreement. In the story, Lennon writes that such jobs were "brummer striving", explaining in a 1968 television interview that the term referred to "all those jobs that people have that they don't want. And there's probably about 90 percent brummer strivers watching in at the moment." The 1962 story "Randolf's Party" was never discussed by Lennon, but Lewisohn suggests he most likely wrote it about former Beatles drummer Pete Best. Lewisohn mentions similarities between Best and the lead character, including an absent father figure and Best's first name being Randolph. Best biographer Mallory Curley describes the lines "We never liked you all the years we've known you. You were never raelly one of us you know, soft head" as, "the crux of Pete's Beatles career, in one paragraph."
Riley opines that the short story "Unhappy Frank" can be read as Lennon's "screed against 'mother, aimed at both his aunt Mimi and late-mother Julia for their over-protectiveness and absence, respectively. The poem "Good Dog Nigel" tells the story of a happy dog that is Animal euthanasia, put down. Riley suggests it was inspired by Mimi putting down Lennon's dog, Sally, and that the dog in the poem shares its name with Lennon's childhood friend Nigel Walley, a witness to Julia's death. Prone to hitting his girlfriends as a teenager, Lennon also included several domestic violence allusions in the book, such as "No Flies on Frank", where a man beats his wife to death and then tries to deliver the corpse to his mother-in-law. In his book ''The Lives of John Lennon'', author Albert Goldman interprets the story as relating to Lennon's feelings about his wife Cynthia Lennon, Cynthia and Mimi.
Sauceda and Ingham comment that the book includes several references to "cripples", Lennon having had developed phobias of physical and mental disabilities as a child. Thelma Pickles, Lennon's girlfriend in the autumn of 1958, later recalled he would joke with disabled people he encountered in public, including "[accosting] men in wheelchairs and [jeering], 'How did you lose your legs? Chasing the wife? In an interview with Hunter Davies for ''The Beatles: The Authorised Biography'', Lennon admitted that he "did have a cruel humor", suggesting it was a way of hiding his emotions. He concluded: "I would never hurt a cripple. It was just part of our jokes, our way of life." During the Beatles' tours, people with physical handicaps were often brought to meet the band, with some parents hoping that their child being touched by a Beatle would heal them. In his 1970 interview with ''Rolling Stone'', Lennon remembered, "[w]e were just surrounded by cripples and blind people all the time and when we would go through corridors they would be all touching us. It got like that, it was horrifying". Sauceda suggests that these strange recent experiences led to Lennon to incorporating them into his stories. For Doggett, the essential qualities of Lennon's writing are "cruelty, [a] matter-of-fact attitude to death and destruction, and [a] quick descent from bathos into gibberish".
Anti-authority and the Beat movement
''In His Own Write'' includes elements of anti-authority sentiment, disparaging both politics and Christianity, with Lennon recalling that the book was "pretty heavy on the church" with "many knocks at religion" and includes a scene depicting a dispute between a worker and a Capitalism, capitalist. Riley suggests that contemporary reviewers were overtaken by the book's "loopy, scabrous energy", overlooking the "subversion [which] lay embedded in its cryptic asides". The story "A letter", for example, references Christine Keeler and the Profumo affair, featuring a drawing of her and the closing line, "We hope this fires you as you keeler."
Lennon and his best friend in art college, Stu Sutcliffe, often discussed writers like Henry Miller, Jack Kerouac and other Beat Generation, Beat poets, such as Gregory Corso and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Lennon, Sutcliffe and Harry sometimes interacted with the local British beat scene, and, in June 1960, the Beatles – then known as the Silver Beetles – provided musical backing for the beat poet Royston Ellis during a poetry reading at the Jacaranda coffee bar in Liverpool. While Lennon suggested in a 1965 interview that if he had not been a Beatle he "might have been a Beat Poet", author Greg Herriges declares that ''In His Own Write'' irreverent attacks on the mainstream ranked Lennon among the best of his predecessors in the Beat Generation. Journalist Simon Warner disagrees, positing that Lennon's writing style owed little to the Beat movement, being instead largely derived from the nonsense tradition of the late nineteenth century.
Illustrations
The illustrations of ''In His Own Write'' have received comparatively little attention. Doggett writes that the book's drawings are similar to the "shapeless figures" of Thurber, but with Lennon's unique touch. He interprets much of the art as displaying the same fascination with cripples apparent in the text, joining faces to "unwieldy, joke-animal bodies" alongside figures "distorted almost beyond humanity". Journalist Scott Gutterman describes the characters as "strange, protoplasmic creatures", and "lumpen everyman and everywoman figures" joined by animals, "[gamboling] around an empty landscape, engaged in obscure pursuits".
Analysing the illustration accompanying the piece "Randolf's Party", Gutterman describes the group as "gossiping, frowning, and bunching together", but while some figures adhere to regular social conventions, some fly away out of the image. Doggett interprets the same drawing as including "Neanderthal men", some merely faces attached to balloons, while others "[boast] Cubism, Cubist profiles with one eye hovering just outside their faces". Sauceda suggests the figures of the drawing reappear in the Beatles' 1968 animated film, ''Yellow Submarine (film), Yellow Submarine'', and describes the "balloon heads" as a metaphor for people's "empty-headedness". Doggett and Sauceda each identify self-portraits among Lennon's drawings, including one of a Lennon-like figure flying through the air, which Doggett determines to be one of the book's best illustrations. Doggett interprets it as evoking Lennon's "wish-fulfillment dreams", while Sauceda and Gutterman each see the drawing as representing the freedom Lennon felt in making his art.
Legacy
Cultural commentators of the 1960s often focused on Lennon as the leading artistic and literary figure in the Beatles. In her study of Beatles historiography, historian Erin Torkelson Weber suggests that the publication of ''In His Own Write'' reinforced these perceptions, with many viewing Lennon as "the smart one" of the group, and that the band's first film, ''A Hard Day's Night'', further emphasised that view. Everett arrives at similar conclusions, writing that, however unfairly, Lennon was often described as more artistically adventurous than McCartney in part because of the publication of his two books. Communications professor Michael R. Frontani states that the book served to further distinguish Lennon's image within the Beatles, while ''The Independent, Independent'' writer Andy Gill (writer), Andy Gill felt that it and ''A Spaniard in the Works'' revealed Lennon to be "the sharpest Beatle, a man of acid wit".

Beatles writer Kenneth Womack suggests that, paired with the Beatles' debut film, the book challenged the band's "non-believers", made up of those outside their then largely teenage fanbase, a contention with which philosophy professor Bernard Gendron agrees, writing that the two pieces of media initiated "a major reversal of the public assessment of the Beatles' aesthetic worth." Doggett groups the book with the Beatles' more general move from the "classic working-class pop milieu" towards "an arty middle-class environment". He argues that the band's invitation into the British establishment – such as their interactions with photographer Robert Freeman, director Dick Lester and publisher Tom Maschler, among others – was unique for pop musicians of the time and threatened to erode elements of the British class system. Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Philip of the British royal family read the book and said he enjoyed it thoroughly, while Prime Minister of Canada, Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau described Lennon in 1969 as "a pretty good poet". The book resulted in numerous businesses and charities requesting that Lennon produce illustrations. In 2014, the broker Sotheby's auctioned over one hundred of Lennon's manuscripts for ''In His Own Write'' and ''A Spaniard in the Works'' from Maschler's collection. The short stories, poems and line drawings sold for US$2.9 million (US$ million adjusted for inflation), more than double their pre-sale estimate.
Lennon issuing a book of poetry before Bob Dylan subverted expectations in Britain, where Lennon was still seen as a simple pop star and Dylan was lauded as a poet. Inspired by ''In His Own Write'', Dylan began his first book of poetry in 1965, later published in 1971 as ''Tarantula (poetry collection), Tarantula''. Using similar wordplay, though with fewer puns, Dylan described it contemporaneously as "a John Lennon-type book". Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin suggests that Lennon's piece "A Letter" is the most overt example of ''In His Own Write'' influence on ''Tarantula'', with several similar satirical letters appearing in Dylan's collection. Three volumes of Dylan's personal writings were later wikt:booklegging, booklegged under the title ''In His Own Write: Personal Sketches'', released in 1980, 1990 and 1992. Beyond influencing Dylan, the book also inspired Michael Maslin, a cartoonist for ''The New Yorker'' magazine. A fellow Thurber enthusiast, he identified it, particularly the piece "The Fat Growth of Eric Hearble", as his introduction to "crazy wacky humor".
Other versions
''The Penguin John Lennon''
In 1965, Lennon published a second book of nonsense literature, ''A Spaniard in the Works'', expanding on the wordplay and parody of ''In His Own Write''. While it was a best-seller, reviewers were generally unenthusiastic, considering it similar to his first book yet without the benefit of being unexpected. He began a third book, planned for release in February 1966, but abandoned it soon after, leaving the two books the only ones published in his lifetime.
In what Doggett terms "an admission that his literary career was at an end", Lennon consented to both of his books being joined into a single paperback. On 27 October 1966, Penguin Books published ''The Penguin John Lennon''. The first edition to join both of his books into one volume, the publishers altered the proportions of several illustrations in the process. The art director of Penguin Books, Alan Aldridge, initially conceived that the cover would consist of a painting depicting Lennon as a penguin, but the publishing director rejected the idea as disrespectful to the company. Aldridge commissioned British photographer Brian Duffy (photographer), Brian Duffy to take a cover photo with Lennon posing next to a birdcage. On the day of photoshoot, Aldridge changed his mind and instead had Lennon dress as the comic book character Superman, with the imagery meant to suggest he had now conquered music, film and literature. DC Comics, the owners of the Superman franchise, claimed the image Copyright infringement, infringed on their copyright, so Aldridge retouched the photo, replacing the ''S'' on the Superman logo, costume's shield with Lennon's initials. At least two more covers were used in the next four years; one shows Lennon wearing several pairs of glasses, while the 1969 edition shows a portrait of Lennon with long hair and a beard.
Translations
''In His Own Write'' has been translated into several different languages. Authors Christiane Rochefort and Rachel Mizraki translated the book into French language, French, published in 1965 as with a new humorous preface titled " ". Scholar Margaret-Anne Hutton suggests that the book's irreverence, black comedy, black humour and anti-establishment stance pairs well with Rochefort's style and that its wordplay anticipates that of her 1966 book, . The book was translated into Finnish language, Finnish by the translator responsible for adapting the works of Joyce.
Author Robert Gernhardt attempted to convince Arno Schmidt – who later worked on Joyce translations – to translate ''In His Own Write'' into German language, German, but Schmidt rejected the offer. Instead, publisher and Wolf Dieter Rogosky each translated some parts of the work, publishing a bilingual German/English version, , in 1965. Author published a new edition in 2010, updating several cultural references in the process. Argentines, Argentine author Jaime Rest translated the book into Spanish language, Spanish in the 1960s as , using a Buenos Aires urban-dialect. Andy Ehrenhaus published a bilingual Spanish/English edition of both ''In His Own Write'' and ''A Spaniard in the Works'' in 2009, with his strategy of imagining Lennon as writing in Spanish described by one commentator as "lunatically effective".
Adaptations
''The Lennon Play: In His Own Write''
Writing (1966–1968)
When Lennon began writing ''A Spaniard in the Works'', he considered making a spoken-word LP with extracts from ''In His Own Write'' but ultimately decided against it. In 1966, Theodore Mann, the artistic director of New York City's Circle in the Square Theatre, Circle in the Square, commissioned American playwright
Adrienne Kennedy to write a new play. Kennedy came up with the idea of adapting Lennon's two books for the stage, flying to London to discuss the idea with Jonathan Cape. Around the end of 1967, actor
Victor Spinetti began working with Kennedy to adapt the two books into a one-act play. Spinetti had acted in the Beatles' films ''A Hard Day's Night'', ''Help! (film), Help!'' and ''Magical Mystery Tour (film), Magical Mystery Tour'', and became good friends with Lennon. Originally titled ''Scene Three, Act One'' after one of ''In His Own Write'' stories and staged under that name in late-1967, the play's title was changed to ''The Lennon Play: In His Own Write''. The play joins elements of the books together to tell the story of an imaginative boy growing up, escaping from the mundane world through his daydreaming. Lennon sent notes and additions for the play to Spinetti, and held final approval on Spinetti and Kennedy's script. Kennedy was let go from the project before it was finished.
On 3 October 1967, the
National Theatre Company in London announced that they would be staging an adaption of Lennon's two books. The next month, on 24 November, Lennon compiled effects tapes at Abbey Road Studios, EMI Recording Studios for use in the production. Returning on 28 November for a Beatles recording session, he recorded speech and sound effects, working past midnight from 2:45 am to 4:30 am. Spinetti attended the session to assist Lennon in preparing the tapes. Sir Laurence Olivier produced the show, while Spinetti directed. Riley writes Adrian Mitchell collaborated on the production but does not specify in what capacity. In the spring of 1968, Spinetti and Lennon discussed ways the show could be performed, and in the summer Lennon attended several rehearsals of the show between sessions for the Beatles' The Beatles (album), eponymous album, also known as "the White album". In a June 1968 interview, he stated that "[w]hen I saw the rehearsal, I felt quite emotional... I was too involved with it when it was written... it took something like this to make me see what I was about then". A little over a week before its opening, Lennon recorded twelve more tape loops and sound effects for use in the play, copying them and taking the tape at the end of the session.
Premiere (June 1968)
The play opened at The Old Vic theatre in London on 18 June 1968, and Simon & Schuster published it the same year. It was heavily censored due to lines perceived as blasphemous and disrespectful to world leaders, including a speech from the Monarchy of the United Kingdom, Queen titled "my housebound and eyeball". Lennon was enthusiastic about it; Spinetti later recalled Lennon excitedly running up to him after the first night's performance, expressing that the play reminded him of his early enthusiasm for writing. Reception to the play however was mixed. Reviewing it for ''The New York Times'', critic Martin Esslin described it as "ingenious and skillful, but ultimately less than satisfying" due to the lack of any underlying meaning. Sauceda retrospectively dismisses the play as a weak adaption that struggles to generate "thematic momentum". He criticises " awkward and pointless attempts to ape Lennon's style" by Spinetti and Kennedy that "[infringe] on the integrity of John Lennon's work". For example, he writes that they changed Lennon's pun "Prevelant ze Gaute" – a play on French leader Charles de Gaulle – to "Pregnant De Gaulle".
Though they were both still married to other people, Yoko Ono joined Lennon at the opening performance in one of their first appearances in public together. Some journalists challenged the couple, shouting "Where's your wife?" at Lennon, in reference to Cynthia. Cynthia, then holidaying in Italy with her family and her and Lennon's son, Julian Lennon, Julian, saw photos of the couple attending the premiere in an Italian newspaper. In an interview with Ray Coleman, she recalled, "I knew when I saw the picture that that was ", concluding that Lennon would only have brought Ono out in public if he was prepared for a divorce. The ensuing controversy over Lennon and Ono's appearance drew press attention away from the play. Everett writes the couple were "lambasted in very hurtful ways by the press, often from an openly racist perspective". Ono biographer Jerry Hopkins (author), Jerry Hopkins suggests the couple's first experiment with heroin in July 1968 was in part due to the pain they experienced from their treatment by the press,
[, quoted in .] an opinion Beatles writer Joe Goodden shares, though he writes that they first used the drug together in May 1968.
Other adaptations
Lennon briefly considered adapting his two books into a film, announcing at a 14 May 1968 press conference that Apple Corps would be producing it within the year. Besides ''The Lennon Play'', playwright Jonathan Glew directed the book's only other adaption in 2015 after acquiring permission from Lennon's widow, Ono. Staged at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the production consisted of a dramatic reading of all of the book's pieces.
Notes
References
Citations
Sources
Books
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Book chapters
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Journal, newspaper and magazine articles
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
External links
*
* [ ''In His Own Write''] at Google Books
*
*
Lambiek Comiclopedia biography about John Lennon's graphic career, also discussing ''In His Own Write''.
{{John Lennon
1964 short story collections
Books adapted into plays
Books by John Lennon
British short story collections
English poetry collections
Jonathan Cape books
Nonsense poetry
British humorous poems
Simon & Schuster books
Surreal comedy