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Tim BindingTim Binding
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BiographyNovelist Tim Binding was born in Germany in 1947. A former editor at Penguin Books in London, he is a part-time commissioning editor at London publishers Simon & Schuster. He is the author of the novels, In the Kingdom of Air (1993), A Perfect Execution (1996) (shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize), Island Madness (1998), set on Guernsey during the Second World War, and Man Overboard (2005).
   
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Autobiography, Drama, Fiction, Non-fiction     BibliographyIn the Kingdom of Air Cape, 1993 A Perfect Execution Cape, 1996 Island Madness Picador, 1998 On Ilkley Moor: The Story of an English Town Picador, 2001 Anthem Picador, 2003 Man Overboard Picador, 2005 Sylvie and the Songman (illustrated by Angela Barrett) David Fickling Books, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1996 Guardian Fiction Prize (shortlist) A Perfect Execution    
  Critical PerspectiveTim Binding’s novels are linked by their focus on families and communities in post-war Britain; he inhabits the terrain of realism, with a deliberate use of coincidence and the grotesque evocative of Dickens. Often set in wartime, and showing characters either in battle or as the victims of violence, this content is counterbalanced by a style that is lyrical and elegiac. It means that Binding’s writing can charm and disturb at one and the same time.
Binding’s only work of non-fiction, On Ilkley Moor: The Story of an English Town (2001) shares more with the novels than is at first apparent. Partly a history of the Yorkshire town and area where Binding grew up, it also sees Binding return to the past – literally and metaphorically – and appear in the narrative as the third person subject. We should remember that the Ilkley we see could represent any booming northern Victorian town; most evocatively, the book seems an attempt to preserve and recreate forgotten lives and events, both dramatic and mundane. Binding achieves this by using a great deal of documentary evidence: we come to the squabbles of the leading men of Victorian Ilkely, apparently unmediated. This links to Binding’s most recent novel, Man Overboard (2005), a fiction investigating the disappearance of Commander Lionel ‘Buster’ Crabb in 1956. Although Binding would later write in the Daily Mail (26 March 2006) that Crabb was murdered by MI5, the novel is best understood in the words of reviewer Jake Kerridge:
Binding thus belongs firmly to the tradition of the English novel in its focus on character and place and his use of coincidence and artifice: Henry Armstrong finds his mother at the end of Anthem, although the reunion may be short-lived; at the end of A Perfect Execution Jeremiah, an executioner no longer, is reunited with his brother on the Canberra. His brother is now a second-rate cabaret act, having abandoned the life of Punch and Judy shows. An executioner and a puppeteer in the same family, a murdered penguin, and, elsewhere, a couple’s excited planning for a new magazine on lawnmowers: something highly individual is at work. Binding’s oeuvre can best be summed up in the words of Sean O’Brien, reviewing Anthem (The Independent, 27 November 2003): 'Readers of Binding's earlier work, such as A Perfect Execution, will know that the strangeness of his imagination is not a mannerism but the source of its power. Here he uses intensely observed detail as a means of stepping from the ordinary towards the vision of fiery paganism. His England has points of resemblance to Blake, Dickens, Lawrence, Orwell, Powell and Pressburger and Golding, as well as to the Peter Ackroyd of English Music, but his mythmaking is clearly his own.
Dr Nick Turner, 2009.  
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