Sir
Kingsley William Amis (April
16, 1922 – October
22, 1995) was
an English
novelist, poet, critic, and teacher. He wrote more than twenty novels, three
collections of poetry, short stories, radio and television scripts, and books of
social and literary criticism. He is the father of English novelist Martin
Amis.
Contents
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Kingsley
Amis was born in London,
educated at the City
of London School and St.
John's College, Oxford, where he met Philip
Larkin, forming the most important friendship of his life. After serving in
the army's Royal
Corps of Signals, he completed university in 1947, and was a lecturer in
English at the University
of Wales Swansea (1948–61), and Cambridge
(1961–63).
Amis
achieved popular success with his first novel Lucky
Jim, which is considered the exemplary novel of Fifties
Britain. The novel won the Somerset
Maugham Award for fiction and Amis was associated with the writers labelled Angry
Young Men. Lucky Jim is a seminal
work, the first English novel featuring an ordinary man as anti-hero.
As a poet, Amis was associated with The
Movement.
As
a young man, Kingsley Amis was vocally Stalinist,
and a member of the Communist
Party. He became disillusioned with Communism, finally breaking with it when
the USSR invaded Hungary
in 1956. Thereafter,
Amis was stridently anti-communist, even reactionary. He discusses his political
change of heart in the 1967 essay "Why Lucky Jim Turned Right"; it
percolates into later works such as Russian Hide and Seek (1980).
Amis'
novel about a group of retired friends, The Old Devils, won the Booker
Prize in 1986.
He received a knighthood in 1990.
Amis
was twice married, first in 1948
to Hilary Bardwell, then to novelist Elizabeth
Jane Howard, in 1965;
they divorced in 1983.
He had three children, including the novelist Martin
Amis, who movingly wrote of his father's life and decline, largely due to
alcohol, in his memoir Experience.
Amis's
critical interest in science
fiction led to New Maps of Hell (1960), his interpretation of the
genre's literary qualities. He was particularly enthusiastic about the dystopian
works of Frederik
Pohl and C.M.
Kornbluth, and, in New Maps of Hell, he coined the term "comic
inferno", describing a type of humorous dystopia, particularly common to
the works of Robert
Sheckley. With the Sovietologist
Robert
Conquest, he produced the science fiction anthology series Spectrum
I–IV, which heavily drew upon the 1950s magazine Astounding
Science Fiction for sources. He wrote two science fiction novels, The
Alteration, an alternate
history novel set in a twentieth-century Great Britain where the Reformation
never occurred; and the supernatural-horror novel, The Green Man, which
the BBC adapted for
television.
A
tape-recorded conversation on science fiction took place between Amis, C.S.Lewis
and Brian
Aldiss in Lewis's rooms at Cambridge in December 1962. A transcript appears
under the title 'Unreal Estates' in the collection "On Stories" by C.S.Lewis.
Kingsley
Amis became associated with Ian
Fleming's creation, James
Bond, in the 1960s, writing critical works connected with the fictional spy,
either under a pseudonym or uncredited. He wrote the popular The
James Bond Dossier under his own name. Later, he wrote, The
Book of Bond, or, Every Man His Own 007, a tongue-in-cheek,
how-to manual about being a sophisticated spy, under the pseudonym "Lt.
Col. William 'Bill' Tanner", Tanner being M's
Chief of Staff in many of Fleming's Bond novels.
It
is widely claimed that, after Fleming died in 1964 following completion of an
early draft of The
Man with the Golden Gun, the publisher commissioned Amis and possibly
other writers to finalize the manuscript. Bond historians and Fleming
biographers have, in recent years, debunked this theory, indicating that no such
ghostwriter
was ever employed. (See here
for more on the controversy and speculation.)
In
1968, the owners of the James Bond property, Glidrose
Publications, attempted to continue the literary series by hiring different
novelists, all writing under the pseudonym "Robert
Markham." Kingsley Amis was the first to write a Robert Markham novel, Colonel
Sun, but no further Markham imprint books were published. It is widely
believed that Amis had planned to write a second Bond novel-BOND HAD NEVER LIKED
ACAPULCO, but was talked out of it.
Wikiquote
has a collection of quotations related to:
1947
Amis's first collection of poems, Bright November
1953
A Frame of Mind
1954
Poems: Fantasy Portraits.
1954
Lucky Jim,
Amis' first novel
1955
That Uncertain Feeling
1956
A Case of Samples: Poems 1946-1956.
1958
I Like it Here
1960
Take a Girl Like You
1960
New Maps of Hell
1960
Hemingway
in Space (short story), Punch
Dec 1960
1962
My Enemy's Enemy
1962
The Evans County
1963
One Fat Englishman
1965
The Egyptologists (with Robert
Conquest).
1965
The Book of Bond, or Every Man His Own 007, under the pseudonym "Lt.-Col
William ('Bill') Tanner"
1966
The Anti-Death League
1968
Colonel
Sun, a James
Bond novel, under the pseudonym "Robert Markham."
1968
I Want It Now
1969
The Green Man
1970
What Became of Jane Austen and Other Questions
1971
Girl, 20
1972
On Drink
1973
The Riverside Villas Murders
1974
Ending Up
1974
Rudyard Kipling and his World
1976
The Alteration
1978
Jake's Thing
1979
Collected Poems 1944-78
1980
Russian Hide-and-Seek
1980
Collected Short Stories
1983
Every Day Drinking
1984
How's Your Glass?
1984
Stanley and the Women
1986
The Old Devils
1988
Difficulties With Girls
1990
The Folks That Live on the Hill
1990
The Amis Collection
1991
Memoirs
1991
Mr Barrett's Secret and Other Stories
1992
The Russian Girl
1994
The semi-autobiographical You Can't Do Both was published.
1995
The Biographer's Moustache
1998
The King's English: A Guide to Modern Usage
Richard
Aldington - Kenneth
Allott - Matthew
Arnold - Kenneth
Ashley - W.
H. Auden - William
Barnes - Oliver
Bayley - Hilaire
Belloc - John
Betjeman - Laurence
Binyon - William
Blake - Edmund
Blunden - Rupert
Brooke - Robert
Browning - Robert
Burns - Thomas
Campbell - Thomas
Campion - G.
K. Chesterton - Hartley
Coleridge - Robert
Conquest - W.
J. Cory - John
Davidson - Donald
Davie - C.
Day Lewis - Walter
De la Mare - Ernest
Dowson - Michael
Drayton - Lawrence
Durrell - Jean
Elliot - George
Farewell - James
Elroy Flecker - Thomas
Ford - Roy
Fuller - Robert
Graves - Thomas
Gray - Fulke
Greville - Heath
- Reginald
Heber - Felicia
Dorothea Hemans - W.
E. Henley - George
Herbert - Ralph
Hodgson - Thomas
Hood - Teresa
Hooley - Gerard
Manley Hopkins - A.
E. Housman - Henry
Howard - T.
E. Hulme - Leigh
Hunt - Elizabeth
Jennings - Samuel
Johnson - John
Keats - Henry
King - Charles
Kingsley - Rudyard
Kipling - Philip
Larkin - Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow - John
Lydgate - H.
F. Lyte - Louis
MacNeice - Andrew
Marvell - John
Masefield - Alice
Meynell - Harold
Monro - William
Morris - Edwin
Muir - Henry
Newbolt - Alfred
Noyes - Wilfred
Owen - Thomas
Love Peacock - George
Peele - Alexander
Pope - Frederic
Prokosch - Walter
Ralegh - John
Crowe Ransom - Christina
Rossetti - Siegfried
Sassoon - John
Skelton - Robert
Southey - Edmund
Spenser - Sir
John Squire - Robert
Louis Stevenson - Sir
John Suckling - Algernon
Charles Swinburne - George
Szirtes - Alfred,
Lord Tennyson - Dylan
Thomas - Edward
Thomas - R.
S. Thomas - Francis
Thompson - Anthony
Thwaite - Chidiock
Tichborne - Aurelian
Townsend - W.
J. Turner - Oscar
Wilde - John
Wilmot, Lord Rochester - Roger
Woddis - Charles
Wolfe - William
Wordsworth - W.
B. Yeats - Andrew
Young
[edit]
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsley_Amis"
Categories:
1922
births | 1995
deaths | English
poets | English
novelists | Booker
Prize winners | English
science fiction writers | English
short story writers | James
Bond | Former
students of St John's College, Oxford