English writer of novels, essays, and verse. From the disillusionment and satirical eloquence of
Crome Yellow (1921),
Antic Hay (1923), and
Point Counter Point (1928), Huxley developed towards the Utopianism (perfect political and social conditions) exemplified by
Island (1962). His most popular work, the science fiction novel
Brave New World (1932) shows human beings mass-produced in laboratories and rendered incapable of freedom by indoctrination and drugs.
Huxley was born in Godalming, Surrey, and educated at Oxford University. He was the grandson of the scientist and humanist Thomas Henry
Huxley and brother of the biologist and writer of popular science books Julian Huxley. Aldous Huxley intended to become a doctor, but was hindered by problems with his sight, being blind for a time. Later his eyesight partly recovered and he graduated from Oxford with an English degree in 1915. Huxley joined the staff of the
Athenaeum in 1919 and did miscellaneous literary work. He was in Italy 192330, writing novels, and he associated with English writer D H
Lawrence there. In 1934 he visited Central America and in 1938 settled permanently in California. Huxley's later devotion to mysticism led to his experiments with the hallucinogenic drug mescalin, recorded in
The Doors of Perception (1954). His other works include the philosophical novel
Eyeless in Gaza (1936),
After Many a Summer (1939; Tait Black Memorial Prize), the biography of French monk Père Joseph
Grey Eminence (1941), and
The Devils of Loudun (1952).
© RM 2009. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.