LJK Setright

Discussion in 'Bay Area Bikers' started by JFH, Sep 25, 2005.

  1. JFH

    JFH Guest

    LJK Setright
    (Filed: 17/09/2005)

    LJK Setright, who died on September 7 aged 74, was Britain's best-known
    and most eloquent motoring journalist and author, famous in an era
    before car experts could win easy notoriety on TV; he was "discovered"
    by a loyal readership within a year or two of taking up writing as a
    career in the mid-1960s, and maintained his reputation for erudition,
    mixed with an air of mystery, until he died.

    Setright's fame stemmed primarily from his deep love for automobiles and
    engineering, about which he wrote most consistently and for longest in
    the monthly magazine Car. He was mostly self-taught on engineering
    subjects, but his erudition allowed him to meet the motor industry's
    best engineers on equal terms. It also enabled him to explain
    complicated concepts to his readers with a rare clarity.
    The same insights gave him the confidence to be a trenchant commentator
    who loved voicing provocative (but always elaborately argued) opinions -
    though nothing he ever wrote put his innate love for cars, motorcycles
    and their engineering in the slightest doubt.

    Most of all, Setright was well-known for his lyrical, ornate and
    sometimes high-flown writing style, which bore no similarity to anything
    else written on such subjects. Readers loved or hated Setright's
    writing, but were rarely unmoved by it. Publishers became used to the
    fact that it was he who generated the most correspondence. Setright's
    editors generally loved his contributions, which were always delivered
    free of any kind of blemish, and written exactly to length. Much of the
    time, he even wrote copy in the measure of the publication for which it
    was intended, so that it arrived line-perfect as well.

    Though fearless about voicing his frequently controversial opinions, at
    the core Setright was a private man who rarely volunteered much detail
    about his own life and activities. And although he greatly enjoyed
    communicating with readers en masse, he offered no one the slightest
    hope of individual contact. "It cannot be too widely known," he used to
    say, "that Setright does not indulge in correspondence." He was pleased
    to know that his opinions would be discussed, but was content that the
    discussion should proceed without him.
    Leonard John Kensell Setright (friends called him Leonard, but he was
    always 'LJKS' in print) was born in London on August 10 1931, to
    Australian parents who had settled there. His father was an inventor and
    engineer, who eventually founded a family light engineering business
    that produced, among other things, the Setright ticket dispensing
    machine, famously used by British bus conductors until well into the
    1970s.
    Leonard went to grammar school at Palmer's Green, but lost his father at
    11, perhaps one reason why he did not train in engineering, but read Law
    at London University instead.

    He enjoyed his studies but hated practising law; so, after doing his
    national service in the RAF (when poor eyesight prevented his becoming a
    pilot, he became an air traffic controller instead), Setright turned to
    writing for a living. His first articles were on general engineering
    subjects and he was instantly successful, but his national notoriety
    began when he became a star writer at Car in the mid-1960s, and it never
    waned. Those who worked with Setright became used to answering the same
    question from readers: "What's LJK Setright really like?"
    Setright's interests ranged far wider than automotive subjects and
    engineering. Having studied music as a child, he became expert on the
    clarinet as a band member in the RAF, and played it all his life. Fellow
    journalists remember him producing his instrument at the launch of a BMW
    model in France in the 1970s, and striking up with a jazz band. He was a
    fine singer, and a founder member of the Philharmonia Chorus (one
    treasured memory was a performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony, under
    Otto Klemperer).

    He was a dedicated student of the Jewish religion, which he followed all
    his life. His wide residual knowledge of everything that moved -
    aeroplanes, locomotives, motorcycles - was used to produce several dozen
    books, all on technical subjects but packed with intriguing narrative
    and challenging opinion.

    Those who knew Setright well enjoyed his eccentricities, such as his
    life-long love of Bristol cars, a rare and idiosyncratic marque which
    has its roots in the long-defunct British aircraft industry. He detested
    speed limits and drove notoriously fast, frightening his passengers, but
    seldom had accidents. He hated diesel trucks and cars, not least for the
    "filth" they dropped on the roads, endangering motorcyclists, and he
    also disliked environmental fads.

    He enjoyed dressing well, and had a particular penchant for being
    photographed for some new column or feature. He was vocal on the
    advantages of old age and shamelessly enjoyed smoking, always Sobranie
    Black Russian cigarettes, taking a fatalistic stance about any effect
    they might have on his health.
    He particularly loved the high engineering values of Honda, and drove a
    venerable Prelude Coupe until he died. He liked most motorcycles, too,
    going about on a large, six-cylinder Honda until severely injured in an
    accident (which was not his fault).

    He peppered his writing with classical allusions, or quotations in Latin
    or Greek. He once wrote in blank verse about a Citroen. And when, quite
    recently, the editor of one of Britain's best-known magazines suggested
    he "tone down" these flights of fancy to suit a more modern audience,
    his response was to submit a column entirely in Latin (before offering a
    translation a day later). Blessed with a brilliant memory, Setright
    never needed to take notes.

    LJK Setright's first marriage, which ended in the mid-1970s, produced
    two daughters. He is survived by his children and by Helen, his second
    wife, whom he married late in life.

    Information appearing on telegraph.co.uk is the copyright of Telegraph
    Group Limited and must not be reproduced in any medium without licence.
    For the full copyright statement see Copyright
     
    JFH, Sep 25, 2005
    #1
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  2. JFH

    PC Paul Guest

    LJK Setright will be greatly missed. I have acouple of his books and
    have enjoyed his writing for several periodicals for many years.

    --
    PC Paul
    89 PC800
    77 R100RS

    Trip pics at: http://photos.yahoo.com/paul1cart

    "To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to
    society" - Theodore Roosevelt
     
    PC Paul, Sep 26, 2005
    #2
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