Background
Born in Langland, Glamorgan, Wales on 7 March 1922, the son of Captain John Algernon de Courcy Lyons, Medical Corps and Doris Ada Campbell Young.
Born in Langland, Glamorgan, Wales on 7 March 1922, the son of Captain John Algernon de Courcy Lyons, Medical Corps and Doris Ada Campbell Young.
Source unspecified: Lyons was educated at Bradfield College, Berkshire and Grenoble University He was at Grenoble when World World War II broke out He made a daring escape over the Pyrenees, was caught and imprisoned in Spain from where he manage to escape and work his way back to England where he joined up and served in the Royal Air Force for the rest of the war He served first in North Africa and then he was sent to the Far East to learn Japanese in 3 months He did this with amongst others, Richard Mason, who was a lifelong friend and cousin by marriage Lyons is portrayed by the character "Peter" in Mason"s book "The Wind Cannot Read").
In his lifetime, he was normally just called Islay (pronounced eye-la). The photographs of Lyons illustrate the works of several twentieth century literary figures, including Bryher and Graham Greene. Lyons had been the last lover of the film-maker, Kenneth Macpherson, both of them living in the ‘Villa Tuoro’ on Capri.
Both Macpherson and Lyons were at Norman Douglas’s bedside when he died.
Lyons was a close friend of photographer, Canadian, Roloff Beny. Lyons died on 17 November 1993, in Chiang-Mai, Thailand.
Participant of Lyons’s inheritance to his adopted Thai son, Manop Charoensuk, was a large quantity of photos, books, and letters relating to the life of Baron Jacques d"Adelswärd-Fersen, the novelist and poet, on the island of Capri. lieutenant is believed that Fersen bequeathed the inheritance to Norman Douglas, the Scottish writer, who, in turn, had bequeathed it to Kenneth Macpherson.
On Macpherson’s death, Lyons inherited the estate.
Charoensuk sold it to an American millionaire. In 2002, the complete collection was offered by Sotheby’s in London to the American antiquarian David Deiss, but it was eventually bought by an unknown British dealer. lieutenant is probable, although unconfirmed, that most, if not all, of this inheritance, is what the Beinecke acquired in 2008 and now forms part of the "Norman Douglas Collection (2008 Addition)".(See reference 5 below).
Some of De Courcy Lyons’s work is held in various collections in the United States, notably the Catherine Walston/Graham Greene Papers at Georgetown Library, the Nancy Cunard Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center and the Norman Douglas Collection (2008 Addition) at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.