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Sebastian FaulksSebastian Faulks
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BiographySebastian Faulks was born on 20 April 1953 and was educated at Wellington College and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He was the first literary editor of The Independent and became deputy editor of the Independent on Sunday before leaving in 1991 to concentrate on writing. He has been a columnist for The Guardian (1992-8) and the Evening Standard (1997-9). He continues to contribute articles and reviews to a number of newspapers and magazines. He wrote and presented the Channel 4 Television series 'Churchill's Secret Army', screened in 1999. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
Pistache (2006) is a collection of parodies and pastiches, mostly from BBC Radio 4's The Write Stuff. His latest book is A Week in December (2009), which follows the lives of seven characters in London during the week before Christmas 2007.
   
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Biography, Fiction     BibliographyA Trick of the Light Bodley Head, 1984 The Girl at the Lion d'Or Hutchinson, 1989 A Fool's Alphabet Hutchinson, 1992 Birdsong Hutchinson, 1993 The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives Hutchinson, 1996 Charlotte Gray Hutchinson, 1998 The Vintage Book of War Stories (editor with Jorg Hensgen) Vintage, 1999 On Green Dolphin Street Hutchinson, 2001 Human Traces Hutchinson, 2005 Pistache Hutchinson, 2006 Engleby Hutchinson, 2007 Devil May Care Penguin, 2008 A Week in December Hutchinson, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1994 British Book Awards Author of the Year 1998 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction) (shortlist) Charlotte Gray 2002 CBE 2009 British Book Awards Popular Fiction Award Devil May Care    
  Critical Perspective
At one point in Devil May Care (2008), a French agent observes ‘How easy it was for a secret agent to be a successful adulterer’. Characters and settings in France – and the bittersweet consequences of adultery – are indeed important elements in several of Faulks’ earlier books, especially his ‘French Trilogy’ set in the period 1910-1945. These comprise: a novel of tragic romance The Girl at the Lion D’Or (1989); Birdsong; and Charlotte Gray (1998), a Second World War melodrama involving a heroine of the French resistance to Nazi occupation. These are particularly enjoyable for their lushly descriptive vein about the pleasures of sexual passion, the culture of food and drink, in Paris or small country towns surrounded by countryside. But they have a darker side: in The Girl at the Lion D’Or, the growth of anti-Semitism and drift towards war imparts an ever-increasing atmosphere of anxiety to the lovers’ story. The fate of Jewish characters is more central to Charlotte Gray, as orphans being hidden are betrayed to the Nazi forces and aged relatives are investigated for their ancestry. Hartmann, the married Jewish lawyer of the former novel, turns up in the latter – helping to comfort but also to organize children for transportation.
Faulks’ best-known, and certainly best selling, novel is Birdsong. This too has a pair of adulterous lovers in Stephen and Isabelle, respectively an idealistic young man and the frustrated wife of a textile factory owner. Their all-consuming passion in the first section rather fades into the background as the enormous drama of the First World War takes hold of the story. Stephen himself changes into a battle-hardened officer who has to adopt a mask of cynical fatalism to shield himself from the horrors of the trenches. And it is here that Faulks’ descriptive talents really move readers. He is superb in detailing the intensity of war, soldiers’ tension while waiting for an attack, and the gory details of battle carnage and its effects on men’s bodies and minds. A subsidiary storyline involving Stephen’s grand-daughter discovering his journal in the 1970s, and her giving birth to a child, was perhaps an unnecessary contrivance. Birdsong’s appeal is in its narrative drive and moving views of people caught up by great events.
The novel presents a large amount of research into late 19th-century psychiatric science, with anticipations of some future medical developments. Jacques’ theory of ‘psychophysical resolution’ clearly anticipates psychoanalyis, while an observation is casually made that ‘one day we may be able to take a photograph through the bone of the skull’. Perhaps more interesting are speculations about the functioning of the brain, consciousness itself, and ‘what it means to be human’. Thomas, who examines a variety of brains in post-mortems, concludes that ‘consciousness is like an extra sense’. This makes his later development of Alzheimer’s, and consequent memory loss, all the more poignant. The novel moves through the years to the First World War, and its swallowing up of young Daniel – whose wartime experiences and letters home form some of the most poignant writing in the book.
Engleby (2007) is in many ways Faulks’ most unusual novel. It shares with Human Traces the subject of human consciousness but its setting and manner is entirely different. Instead of heroic and altruistic scientific Victorian characters, we are introduced to an-almost contemporary voice from the outset: ‘My name is Mike Engelby, and I’m in my second year at an ancient university’. This is the Cambridge of the early 1970s, replete with drinking, pop culture and dull tutorials. Engelby proceeds to tell us of his encounters there, especially with good-looking student Jennifer Arkland, whose subsequent disappearance forms the essence of the plot. Engelby proves to be an engaging narrator, even as he unveils his disturbed family history and increasingly devious behaviour, but also – of course – an untrustworthy one. He comes to admit that ‘My memory’s odd … I’m big on detail, but there are holes in the fabric’. We follow his burgeoning career in the national media as the years unfold, and his viewpoint on events becomes ever darker. As always with Faulks, the period detailing is excellent, the narrative drive strong, and full of clever contrivances. While Sebastian Faulks’ forte has been to depict romance under pressure of war, in this startling book he shows another side to his talents - summoning up an almost contemporary era as well as more disturbing aspects of humanity.
Dr Jules Smith, 2008  
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