James Gordon Farrell

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For the American novelist, see James T. Farrell.

The British novelist James Gordon Farrell (25 January 193511 August 1979), referred to by-and-large as J.G. Farrell, achieved fame for his historical fiction, most notably his Empire Trilogy (Troubles, The Siege of Krishnapur and The Singapore Grip), three books dealing with the political and human consequences of British colonial rule. The Siege of Krishnapur won the 1973 Booker Prize.

Contents

[edit] Career

[edit] Childhood and education

Farrell, born in Liverpool into a family of Irish background, from the age of 12 attended Rossall public school in Lancashire. At about this time his parents moved to Dublin, and from this point on Farrell spent much time in Ireland: this, perhaps combined with the popularity of Troubles, leads some to treat him as an Irish writer. In 1956 he went to study at Brasenose College, Oxford; while there he contracted polio.

[edit] Early works

Farrell published his first novel, A Man From Elsewhere, in 1963. Set in France. it shows the clear influence of French Existentialism. It entirely lacks the ironic humour and the tender appreciation of human frailty which characterise his later work. Farrell himself came to dislike the book.

Two years after this came The Lung, in which Farrell returned to his real-life trauma of less than a decade earlier: the main character Martin Sands contracts polio and has to spend a long period in hospital. In 1967 he published A Girl in the Head set in the fictional English seaside town of Maidenhair Bay. Like its two predecessors, the book met only middling critical and public reaction. Had Farrell's career ended at this point readers would have remembered him as a minor figure at best. Yet his next book proved him a writer of great talent and unique sensibility.

[edit] Empire Trilogy

Troubles tells the comic yet melancholic tale of an English Major, Brendan Archer, who in 1919 goes to County Wicklow in Ireland to meet the woman he believes himself about to marry. From the viewpoint of the crumbling Majestic Hotel at Kilnalough he watches Ireland's fight for independence from Britain. At a political level both Farrell's next book The Siege of Krishnapur and his last completed work The Singapore Grip continue this narrative of the collapse of British colonial power. The three novels interconnected principally only in a broad thematic sense, although Archer does reappear briefly in The Singapore Grip.

Charles Sturridge scripted a film version of Troubles made for British television in 1988 and directed by Christopher Morahan.[1]

[edit] Death

In 1979 Farrell decided to quit London to take up residence on the Sheep's Head peninsula in southwestern Ireland. A few months later he drowned in Bantry Bay, apparently while angling. He lies buried in the cemetery of St. James's Church of Ireland church in Durrus.

The manuscript library at Trinity College, Dublin holds his papers: Papers of James Gordon Farrell (1935-1979). TCD MSS 9128-60.

[edit] Works

  • 1963 A Man From Elsewhere
  • 1965 The Lung
  • 1967 A Girl in the Head

Empire Trilogy:

  • 1973-74 The Pussycat Who Fell in Love with a Suitcase. Atlantis. 6 (Winter 1973/4), pp. 6-10
  • 1981 The hill station : an unfinished novel, and an Indian diary, unfinished, edited by John Spurling. London : Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0297779222

[edit] About Farrell

  • 1981 John Spurling, Margaret Drabble, Malcolm Dean: Personal Memories of J.G. Farrell; The Hill Station
  • 1979 Bernard Bergonzi, The Contemporary English Novel
  • 1997 Michael C. Prusse, "Tomorrow is Another Day": The Fictions of James Gordon Farrell
  • 1997 Derek Mahon: "The World of J.G. Farrell", (poem), October 1997
  • 1999 Lavinia Greacen: J.G. Farrell: The Making of a Writer (full-length biography). London : Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747544638
  • 2000 Elisabeth Delattre: "Histoire et fiction dans Troubles de J.G.Farrell", Études Irlandaises, printemps 2000, n° 25-1, pp. 65-80
  • 2002 Elisabeth Delattre: "Du Monde romanesque au poème : 'The World of J.G.Farrell' de Derek Mahon ", Études Irlandaises, printemps 2002, n° 27-1, pp. 93-105
  • 2003 Elisabeth Delattre: "Intégrer, exclure ou la genèse d'une œuvre : Troubles de J.G.Farrell", in Irlande : Inclusion, exclusion, publié sous la direction de Françoise Canon-Roger, Presses Universitaires de Reims, 2003, pp. 65-80.

[edit] Prizes

[edit] External links

[edit] Footnotes