An Unfinished Autobiography is the subtitle and something of an understatement. A Scarcely Begun Autobiography would be more accurate. What it is, in detail, is a conflation of two manuscripts left with his friend E R Dodds in 1941 (when MacNeice was only 34) and not touched again until after MacNeice's death in 1963. It is then padded out with another account by MacNeice of his childhood and an essay by John Hilton who knew him well at school and university.
There is thus nothing about MacNeice's innovative and important radio plays, virtually nothing about his writing or his close association with W H Auden and Stephen Spender. The other member of the circle, Cecil Day Lewis, only merits a single line in The Strings are False; it as if MacNeice barely knew him. Indeed, why anyone who seems determined to say nothing revelatory about himself or his emotional life should want to even start an autobiography defeats me. His divorce - his wife ran off to America with their lodger, leaving MacNeice to bring up their year-old son alone - warrants only slightly more detail than Day-Lewis. He doesn't bother to tell us the lodger's actual name (Charles Katzmann).
That said, this is all there is - the only personal writing MacNeice ever did. Before the war (the time I am reseaching) MacNeice seems to have been the perpetual absentee in literary circles - always somewhere else - but nevertheless making a name for himself as poet and lecturer. If you want to know about Auden in the Thirties (and again, I do) you have to read The Strings are False. If you have to read The Strings are False, it helps to know quite about poetry of the 1930s and MacNeice's place in it.
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