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Beryl Bainbridge

Beryl Bainbridge


Back | Genres | Bibliography | Prizes and awards | Critical perspective
Contact details | Related links | Printer-friendly version

 

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Photo: © Little, Brown

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Biography

Dame Beryl Bainbridge was born in Lancashire on 21 November 1934. She was educated at Merchant Taylors' School in Liverpool and worked as an actress at Liverpool Repertory Theatre. She was awarded a DBE in 2000. She wrote her first novel, Harriet Said, during the 1950s, although it was not published until 1972.

Her first published novel, A Weekend with Claud, appeared in 1967 (revised edition 1981), and was followed by Another Part of the Wood (1968), and The Dressmaker (1973), adapted as a film in 1989. The Bottle Factory Outing (1974) won the Guardian Fiction Prize and Injury Time (1977) won the Whitbread Novel Award. An Awfully Big Adventure (1989) drew on her experiences as an actress working in Liverpool during the 1950s and was adapted as a film. Her more recent novels, based on real lives and historical events, include The Birthday Boys (1991), the story of Captain Scott's ill-fated Antarctic expedition; Every Man For Himself (1996), set on board the Titanic; and Master Georgie (1998), chronicling a young surgeon's adventures during the Crimean War. Every Man for Himself won the Whitbread Novel Award and Master Georgie won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction), the WH Smith Literary Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Her most recent novel is The Girl in the Polka Dot Dress (2008).

 

Beryl Bainbridge lives in north London.

 

 

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Genres (in alphabetical order)

Fiction, Non-fiction, Short stories

 

 

Bibliography

A Weekend with Claud   (revised as 'A Weekend with Claude; 1981)   Hutchinson, 1967

Another Part of the Wood   Hutchinson, 1968

Harriet Said   Duckworth, 1972

Sweet William   Duckworth, 1973

The Dressmaker   Duckworth, 1973

The Bottle Factory Outing   Duckworth, 1974

A Quiet Life   Duckworth, 1976

Injury Time   Duckworth, 1977

Young Adolf   Duckworth, 1978

Winter Garden   Duckworth, 1980

English Journey   Duckworth, 1984

Watson's Apology   Duckworth, 1984

Forever England   Duckworth, 1985

Mum and Mr Armitage   Duckworth, 1985

Filthy Lucre, or The Tragedy of Andrew Ledwhistle and Richard Soleway   Duckworth, 1986

An Awfully Big Adventure   Duckworth, 1989

The Birthday Boys   Duckworth, 1991

Something Happened Yesterday   Duckworth, 1993

Collected Stories   Duckworth, 1994

Every Man For Himself   Duckworth, 1996

Master Georgie   Duckworth, 1998

According to Queeney   Little, Brown, 2001

Front Row: Evenings at the Theatre   Continuum International, 2005

The Girl in the Polka Dot Dress   Little, Brown, 2008

 

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Prizes and awards

1973   Booker Prize for Fiction   (shortlist)   The Dressmaker

1974   Booker Prize for Fiction   (shortlist)   The Bottle Factory Outing

1974   Guardian Fiction Prize   The Bottle Factory Outing

1977   Whitbread Novel Award   Injury Time

1990   Booker Prize for Fiction   (shortlist)   An Awfully Big Adventure

1996   Booker Prize for Fiction   (shortlist)   Every Man For Himself

1996   Whitbread Novel Award   Every Man For Himself

1998   Booker Prize for Fiction   (shortlist)   Master Georgie

1998   James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction)   Master Georgie

1999   Commonwealth Writers Prize (Eurasia Region, Best Book)   Master Georgie

1999   WH Smith Literary Award   Master Georgie

2000   DBE

2003   David Cohen British Literature Prize   (jointly with Thom Gunn)

 

 

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Critical Perspective

Beryl Bainbridge began her working life as an actress and has remained an entertainer ever since, as one of Britain's most popular and best-loved novelists. Her work has attracted a wide readership as well as critical acclaim, having been short-listed for the Booker Prize four times, and winning the Whitbread Prize three times, most recently for Every Man for Himself (1996). Her trademark is the sardonic, even at times macabre wit in her books, usually mercilessly black comedies with eccentric characters. But, by the author's skill, we never lose sympathy with these inhabitants of a peculiarly 'dismal England'. This is partly because of her fine ear for the nuances of dialogue, though what is left unsaid is often as important as what is. Bainbridge is a wonderful observer of human folly and self-deception. The shabbiness of human behaviour, especially in domestic warfare between the sexes, is a constant theme. At its most extreme, she explored the motives of a man and wife pushed to breaking point in Watson's Apology (1984), her re-imagining of a notorious Victorian murder case. Usually her long-suffering women characters/narrators content themselves with being sceptical of male pretensions. But Bainbridge can be unusually sympathetic to men. The Birthday Boys (1991), for instance, shows us the fallible sides of Captain Scott and his companions in their doomed struggle to and from the South Pole, in their fears and foibles, their camaraderie and heroic foolishness.

The unpredictable nature of reality is the underlying theme of her first novels, as in A Weekend with Claud (1967) and Another Part of the Wood (1968), which end with sudden death in bizarre circumstances. The latter takes place during a rainy camping weekend in Wales with a mixed group of adults and children wrangling at each other, exploring the woods, and trying to keep amused or at least warm. Joseph's joy with his young son Roland is balanced by arguments with his girlfriend Dotty ('always anxious to put her in the wrong') and the other misfits. All are self-absorbed, somewhat out of step with ordinary life, and have relationships that are deeply disappointing. Interspersed amongst all this are fine comic moments, as when Balfour, 'bloated with excitement', overhears May's husband telling her the erotic story of 'Lallah Rooke' at night. The tragic finale is brought about by Roland swallowing another child's medication. In a typical Bainbridge touch, the news comes as the adults are at last burying their resentments and enjoying themselves with a game of 'Monopoly', his father 'full of fun' holding the paper money in his fist'.

A number of her novels are set in Bainbridge's native Liverpool, from the wartime scenes of The Dressmaker (1973) to Young Adolf (1978) which imagines a visit supposedly made to the city in his youth by the future dictator. But she draws perhaps most successfully on local knowledge, and her own early life working for a repertory company there, in An Awfully Big Adventure (1989), which was fairly recently made into a film starring Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman. The city's hotels, shops and landmarks are seen in cold grainy images of post-war austerity in Britain. A seasonal production of 'Peter Pan' is the stage set for an ensemble piece of the human comedy, whose sad and passionate characters are, as ever, somewhat at emotional cross-purposes. A sixteen year old Stella is the ingenue who in the course of the production gains (mostly sexual) experience but not necessarily self-knowledge. In her naïve infatuation with theatre manager Meredith, a discreet homosexual, she attempts to make him jealous by sleeping with an ageing famous actor, for whom the affair has drastic consequences. As the plot unwinds, Stella's actions unwittingly reveal adultery, homosexuality (then illegal), and the buried secrets of her own parentage. It ends on an absurd note: death in the River Mersey, and Stella blithely phoning 'The Speaking Clock' to hear her actress mother.

In some of her very best novels, Bainbridge has specialised in fictionalising Great British disasters; not only Scott's doomed Antarctic expedition in The Birthday Boys but the larger-scale chaos of the Crimean War in Master Georgie (1998). However, her pre-eminent performance within this special self-created genre is Every Man for Himself, which many readers consider to be her masterpiece. The maiden voyage of 'The Titanic' (freighted with millionaires and hopefuls) is presented over the course of several days through it young narrator Morgan, his views of the hedonistic revelry and passions aboard forming a counterpoint to the inexorable progress of the ship towards nemesis. Again, the pleasure of this remarkably concise and haunting book comes partly from its close focus on a group of passengers, enabling us to make their acquaintance, and partly from Bainbridge's skill in orchestrating subplots. The mysterious older man scurra is involved in most of these, in his revelations to Morgan (supposedly the nephew of financier J. P. Morgan), his arguments with him, and his rivalry for the affections of alluring socialite Wallis. In the best farcical scene in the book, the infatuated and jealous Morgan hides in a closet in Wallis' bedroom, and is then forced to overhear her in flagrante with Scurra. As one of the ship's designers, Morgan takes a professional notice of the ship's workings below decks as well, and an increasingly personal one as a fire breaks out in a coal bunker. Bainbridge steers the narrative with a fine sense of pace, building the tension with hints (a casual mid-Atlantic ice warning), and expertly choreographing the last hours. As he waits to jump into the sea, Morgan finds that 'Death is such a lover's pinch that a man can be excused for prising himself free'.

Bainbridge's latest novel, According to Queeney (2001), again features a young narrator commenting on historical events. The subject is Samuel Johnson's misplaced passion for Queeney's mother Mrs Thrale. It largely takes the form of letters replying to enquiries about the events of thirty years ago, each section being ingeniously headed by the definition of a word from Johnson's Dictionary. The portrait of Johnson that emerges, for all his melancholic attacks and jealous rages, is a very sympathetic one. The ageing writer concludes that age 'weakened the emotions owing to a realisation that the light was fading and nought but darkness lay ahead'. Indeed, by the last pages of almost all of Bainbridge's books, however dubious her characters are, by a kind of alchemy, readers know and care about them. They manage to be heart-felt without being sentimental. An essential theme, announced in Watson's Apology and pervasive throughout her writing, is that 'Tragedy, though hard to contend with, was an affirmation of life'.

 

 

Dr Jules Smith, 2001

 

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Contact information

Publisher (General enquiries)
Little, Brown Book Group
Little Brown Book Group
100, Victoria Embankment
London  EC4Y 0DY
England
Tel: +44 (0)20 7911 8000
Fax: +44 (0)20 7911 8100
E-mail: info@littlebrown.co.uk
http://www.littlebrown.co.uk

Agent
John Johnson (Authors' Agent) Ltd
Clerkenwell House
45-47 Clerkenwell Green
London  EC1R OHT
England
Tel: +44 (0)20 7251 0125
Fax: +44 (0)20 7251 2172
E-mail: johnjohnson@btinternet.com

Also published by
Duckworth Publishers
90-93 Cowcross Street
London  EC1M 6BF
England
Tel: +44 (0) 207 490 7300
Fax: +44 (0) 207 490 0080
E-mail: info@duckworth-publishers.co.uk
http://www.duckw.com


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Related links

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