William Golding's
Biography


William Golding (1911-1993)

in full Sir Willam Gerald Golding

English novelist who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1983. The choise was unexpected,
because from the English writers novelist Graham Greene (1904-1991) was considered the
strongest candidate. In many works Golding has revealed the dark places of human heart, when
isolated individuals or small groups are pushed into extreme situations.
William Golding was born in the village of St. Columb Minor in Cornwall. His father was a
schoolmaster with radical convictions in politics and strong faith in science. Golding started writing at
the age of seven, but following the wished of his parents he studied studied natural sciences and
English at Brasenose College, Oxford. His first book, a collection of poems appeared in 1934, a
year before receiving his B.A.
After graduation Golding became a settlement house worker, and also wrote plays in London. In
1939 he moved to Salisbury, where he began teaching English at Bishop Wordsworth's School.
During World War II he served in the Royal Navy in command of a rocket ship, and took part in the
Normandy invasion. After the war Golding returned to writing and teaching.
In Salisbury Golding wrote four books, but did not get them published. His novel LORD OF THE
FLIES was turned down by twenty-one publishes, until it finally appeared in 1954. The book
became immediate success in Britain and bestseller among American readers in the late 1950s. His
breakthrough novel was followed by THE INHERITORS (1955), which overturned H.G. Wells's
Outline of History (1920) and depicted the extermination of Neanderthal man by Homo Sapiens,
PINCHER MARTIN (1956), story of a naval officer, who faces death on his torpedoed ship, and
FREE FALL (1959), which is set in contemporary society, focusing an an ordinary man who looks
back over his past.
Golding resigned in 1961 from teaching and devoted himself entirely to writing. His works from the
historical novel THE SPERE (1964), about the construction of a cathedral soire, devoloped then in
two directions: the metaphysical with the theme of the fable like fall from childlike innocence into
guilt, and the social without mythical substructure.
Among Golding's later works is historical trilogy RITES OF PASSAGE (1980), which portayed life
abroad an anciet ship of the line at the end of the Napoleonic Wars, CLOSE QARTERS (1987,
and FIRE DOWN BELOW (1989). Golding's novel THE PAPER MEN (1984) was about the
pursuit of world-famous English novelist Wilfred Barclay by American academic Rick L. Turner.
His best known works is Lord of the Flies, which has been translated into many languages and
filmed in 1963 and 1990. It is an ironic comment on R.M. Ballantyne's Coral Island, describing of a
group of childred, who are evacuated from Britain because of a nuclear war. Their airplane crashes
on an uninhabitated island, and all the adults are killed. The boys create their own society, which
gradually degenerates from democratic, rational, and moral community to tyrannical, bloodthirsty,
and evil. Golding's view is pessimistic: human nature is inherently violent, which reflects the mood of
the post-war and post-Hitler years and comments the 19th century optimism of progress and
education. The Lord of the Flies is Beelzebub, Prince of Devils, the source of evil outside oneself,
and through his parable Golding shows that man is a fallen being. - See: Daniel Defoe and
Robinsonade, a story of a person marooned on a desert island.
William Golding was knighted in 1988. He died in Perranarworthal on June 19, 1993. Golding's last
nivel, THE DOUBLE TONGUE, left in draft at his death, was published in 1995. The story was set
in the ancient Greece, and depicted a Delphic oracle, who witnesses the rise of the Roman power,
and retreat of the Hellenistic culture.
For further reading: William Golding: a Critical Study by I. Gregor and M. Kinkead-Weekes
(1967); The Novels of William Golding by H.S. Babb (1973); W. Golding: Lord of the Flies by
J. Whitley (1970); William Golding by S. Medcalf (1975); William Golding: Some Critical
Considerations, ed. by J.I. Biles and R.D. Evans (1978); William Golding: A Structural Reading
of His Fiction by Philip Redpath (187); The Modern Allegories of William Goldman by L.KL.
Dickson (1990); William Golding by Lawrence S. Friedman (1992); William Golding by Pralhad
A. Kulkarni (1994); The Robinsonade Tradition in Robert Michael Ballantyne's the Coral
Island and William Golding's the Lord of the Flies by Karin Siegl (1996); Readings on Lord of
the Flies, ed. by Clarice Swisher (1997); Language and Style in the Inheritors by David L.
Hoover (1998)
Selected works:
     POEMS, 1934
     LORD OF THE FLIES, 1954 - Kärpästen herra - film 1963, dir. by Peter Brook; remake
     1990, directed for American tv-savvy kids
     INHERITORS, 1955 - Perilliset
     PINCHER MARTIN, 1956
     ENVOY EXTRADORDINARY, 1956 (in Sometime, Never: Three Tales of Imagination)
     THE BRASS BUTTERFLY, 1958 (play)
     FREE FALL, 1960 - Vapaa putoaminen
     THE ANGLO-SAXON, 1962
     THE SPIRE, 1964
     THE HOT GATES, 1965
     THE PYRAMID, 1967
     THE SCORPION GOD, 1971
     DARKNESS VISIBLE, 1979 - Näkyvä pimeys
     RITES OF PASSAGE, 1980 - Merimatka Booker Prize
     A MOVING TARGET, 1982
     THE PAPER MEN, 1984 - Paperimiehet
     AN EGYPTIAN JOURNAL, 1985
     CLOSE QUARTES, 1987
     FIRE DOWN BELOW, 1989 - republished under the general title TO THE END OF THE
     EARTH in 1991
     THE DOUBLE TONGUE, 1995
 

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