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Novels

Sir William Gerald Golding (born Sept. 19, 1911, St. Columb Minor, near Newquay, Cornwall .—died June 19, 1993,. English novelist who in 1983 won the Nobel Prize for Literature for his parables of the human condition.

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Novels

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  1. Sir William Gerald Golding (born Sept. 19, 1911, St. Columb Minor, near Newquay, Cornwall.—died June 19, 1993, English novelist who in 1983 won the Nobel Prize for Literature for his parables of the human condition. educated at Marlborough Grammar School, where his father taught, and at Brasenose College, Oxford, Golding graduated in 1935. After working in small theatre companies, he became a schoolmaster at Bishop Wordsworth’s School, Salisbury. He joined the Royal Navy in 1940, took part in the action that saw the sinking of the German battleship Bismarck, and commanded a rocket-launching craft during the invasion of France in 1944. After the war he resumed teaching at Bishop Wordsworth’s until 1961

  2. Novels • Golding’s first published novel was Lord of the Flies (1954; film 1963 and 1990), the story of a group of schoolboys isolated on a coral island who revert to savagery. Their attempts at establishing a social order gradually devolve into savagery. Finally abandoning all moral constraints, the boys commit murder before they are rescued and returned to civilization. Its imaginative and brutal depiction of the rapid and inevitable dissolution of social mores aroused widespread interest.The book explores the dark side of human nature and stresses the importance of reason and intelligence as tools for dealing with the chaos of existence.

  3. The Inheritors (1955), set in the last days of Neanderthal man, is another story of the essential violence and depravity of human nature. • The guilt-filled reflections of a naval officer, his ship torpedoed, who faces an agonizing death are the subject of Pincher Martin (1956).

  4. Two other novels, Free Fall (1959) and The Spire (1964), also demonstrate Golding’s belief that “man produces evil as a bee produces honey.” • Darkness Visible (1979) tells the story of a boy horribly burned in the London blitz during World War II. • His later works include Rites of Passage (1980), which won the Booker McConnell Prize, and its sequels, • Close Quarters (1987) and Fire Down Below (1989). • Golding was knighted in 1988.

  5. The fiction W. Golding is a unique blending of realism and fable – this mode of writing ic called modern fabulationoutside the narrative itself • Golding is a fabultor – a modern alegorist. His novels are extended metaphors - theirs meanings lie outside the narrative itself.

  6. The list of Golding´s novels • The Inheritors (novel) 1955 • Pincher Martin (novel) 1956 • The Brass Butterfly (play) 1958 • Free Fall (novel) 1959 • The Spire (novel) 1964 • The Hot Gates (essays) 1965 • The Pyramid (novel) 1967 • The Scorpion God (three short novels) 1971 Darkness Visible (novel) 1979 • Rites of Passage (novel) 1980 • A Moving Target (essays and autobiographical pieces) 1982 • The Paper Men (novel) 1984 • An Egyptian Journal 1985 • Close Quarters (novel) 1987 • Fire Down Below (novel) 1989

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