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William BoydWilliam Boyd
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BiographyWilliam Boyd was born in Accra, Ghana, on 7 March 1952. He was educated at Gordonstoun School, Glasgow University and Jesus College, Oxford. His first novel, A Good Man in Africa (1981), was published while he was a lecturer in English at St Hilda's College, Oxford, and won the Whitbread First Novel Award and a Somerset Maugham Award. Boyd was selected in 1983 as one of the 20 'Best of Young British Novelists' in a promotion run by Granta magazine and the Book Marketing Council.
William Boyd lives in London. He was awarded a CBE in 2005.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction, Non-fiction, Radio drama, Screenplay, Short stories     BibliographyA Good Man in Africa Hamish Hamilton, 1981 On the Yankee Station and Other Stories Hamish Hamilton, 1981 An Ice-Cream War Hamish Hamilton, 1982 Stars and Bars Hamish Hamilton, 1984 School Ties Hamish Hamilton, 1985 The New Confessions Hamish Hamilton, 1987 Brazzaville Beach Sinclair-Stevenson, 1990 The Blue Afternoon Sinclair-Stevenson, 1993 The Destiny of Natalie 'X' and Other Stories Sinclair-Stevenson, 1995 Armadillo Hamish Hamilton, 1998 Nat Tate: An American Artist 1928-1960 21 Publishing, 1998 Any Human Heart Hamish Hamilton, 2002 Fascination Hamish Hamilton, 2004 Bamboo Hamish Hamilton, 2005 Restless Bloomsbury, 2006 The Dream Lover Bloomsbury, 2008 Ordinary Thunderstorms Bloomsbury, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1981 Whitbread First Novel Award A Good Man in Africa 1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) An Ice-Cream War 1982 Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize An Ice-Cream War 1982 Somerset Maugham Award A Good Man in Africa 1990 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction) Brazzaville Beach 1991 McVitie's Prize for Scottish Writer of the Year Brazzaville Beach 1993 Sunday Express Book of the Year The Blue Afternoon 1995 Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Fiction) The Blue Afternoon 2004 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (shortlist) Any Human Heart 2005 CBE 2006 Costa Novel Award Restless 2007 British Book Awards Richard and Judy Best Read of the Year (shortlist) Restless    
  Critical PerspectiveWilliam Boyd is perhaps best described as a wry historian of 20th-century life, and an ironic commentator on the ways that life has been represented, not only in literature, but in the companion genres of visual art, film and photography. While his geographical settings vary from the conflict-stricken west African coast of Brazzaville Beach (1990) to the romantic vistas of the Philippine islands in The Blue Afternoon (1993), his recurrent character focus is the English personality and how it adapts – or fails to adapt – to the demands of a foreign landscape. Like Henderson Dores, the introverted Englishman turned extrovert Manhattanite in Stars and Bars (1984), Englishness under pressure is seen to undergo the most radical metamorphoses, and yet remain, at the same time, irrepressibly resilient.
'Nothing today had been remotely how he had imagined it would be; nothing in his education or training had prepared him for the utter randomness and total contingency of events. Here he was, strolling about the battlefield looking for his missing company like a mother searching for lost children in the park.'
When Gabriel is taken prisoner, his brother Felix searches for him in an African landscape transformed into an absurd nightmare of squalor, insects, torrential rain and countless human casualties. And the novel swings ultimately from romance to elegy, providing a brilliant evocation of the long reach of war behind the front lines and into ordinary domestic existence. Much of Boyd’s writing utilises the awkward intersection of private and public life, and the suffering of individuals who – like the unfortunate protagonist of his screenplay Good and Bad at Games (1983) – cannot match the cultural demands of their environment. In this respect, he is also intrigued by the way in which individuals register the intimate details of their lives, something which developed into his use of a diary or journal form in several novels. In Armadillo (1998), a low-level thriller set in a London insurance company, the central character’s journal is his means of containing and interpreting the nature of coincidence, chance, unpredictability and risk in everyday life. And a diary of sorts provides the basis for Boyd’s 1987 epic, The New Confessions, in which film-maker John James Todd’s overriding obsession with Rousseau’s Confessions becomes the basis for his own confessional memoir of a life lived, through war, romance and ambition, in tandem with the twentieth century. The New Confessions showcases not only Boyd’s superb historical instinct but also his ability to perceive the significance of modern cultural representation through the evolution of photography, journalism and cinema. In this novel, the story of the heyday and decline of silent movies and B-westerns underlines the idea that art forms, like people, have their own biographies. The author’s attention to this fact, and to the gaps which emerge between imagination and finished work, later fuelled his 1998 spoof on the New York art world, Nat Tate, and also his forays into architecture, film and music in his recent collection of short stories, Fascination (2004). But Boyd’s most daring commentary on artistic representation – and indeed, his most ambitious use to date of the fictionalized diary format – is reserved for an engrossing commentary on literature itself. Any Human Heart (2002), the journal of Uruguayan-born, British-bred writer Logan Mountstuart, spans the defining episodes of the twentieth century and crosses several continents in tracking the meandering life of a modern man-of-letters through a convoluted sequence of relationships and literary endeavours. Again, the diary is a means of exploring how public events impinge on individual consciousness, so that Mountstuart’s journal alludes almost casually to the war, the death of a prime minister or the abdication of the king. But Boyd also uses it to play ironically on the theme of literary celebrity, bringing his protagonist into contact with a series of 'real' writers in a sequence of comic or petty encounters – a spat with Virginia Woolf in London, a possible sexual encounter with Evelyn Waugh at Oxford, a clumsy exchange with James Joyce in Paris over the translation of the term 'scribouillard'. Any Human Heart is a self-consciously clever novel, a 20th-century picaresque conceived in the tradition of Anthony Powell or Anthony Burgess, and loaded with veiled tributes to Boyd’s literary heroes Cyril Connolly and William Gerhardie, whose flamboyant and affected styles haunt Mountstuart’s own prose. It signals too, towards Boyd’s lingering feelings of uneasiness with colonialism and the British establishment, feelings which would also emerge in some of the subjects treated in his 2005 collection of essays and journalism, Bamboo. But it is also, more simply, a rich and frequently moving study of the inevitability of life’s passage. The elderly Mountstuart, watching teenagers on a French beach, is struck by the simplicity of this fact:
Dr Eve Patten, 2008
 
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