JULIAN BARNES

Barnes as Francophile and Francophone in Bernard Pivot's ''Double je'' (France 2, March 2005)

''Arthur & George'' (2005), 2006 Vintage paperback edition

'Julian Patrick Barnes' (born January 19, 1946 in Leicester, England) is a contemporary English writer of postmodernism in literature. He has been shortlisted three times for the Man Booker Prize (''Flaubert's Parrot'' (1984), ''England, England'' (1998), and ''Arthur & George'' (2005)). He has written crime fiction under the pseudonym Dan Kavanagh.

Contents
Personal life
Career
Works (novels unless otherwise indicated)
Works as Dan Kavanagh
About Barnes
See also
External links

Personal life


Following an education at the City of London School and Merton College, Oxford, he worked as a lexicographer for the Oxford English Dictionary. Subsequently, he worked as a literary editor and film critic. He now writes full-time. His brother, Jonathan Barnes is a philosopher specializing in ancient philosophy.
He lives in London with his wife, the literary agent Pat Kavanagh.

Career


Barnes is a devoted Francophile and his writing reflects his long standing immersion in French literary culture. His first novel, ''Metroland'', is a short, semi-autobiographical story of Christopher, a young man from the London suburbs who travels to Paris as a student for sexual awakening. In 1983, his second novel Before She Met Me features a darker narrative, a story of revenge by a jealous historian who becomes obsessed by his second wife's past. Barnes's breakthrough novel ''Flaubert's Parrot'' broke with the traditional linear structure of his previous novels and featured a fragmentary biographical style story of an elderly doctor, Geoffrey Braithwaite, who tries to rationalise his wife's suicide by focusing obsessively on the life of Gustave Flaubert, and a stuffed parrot that reputedly sat on his writing desk. The novel was published to great acclaim, especially in France, and it established Barnes as one of the pre-eminent writers of his generation.
Staring at the Sun followed in 1986, another ambitious novel about a female pilot who deals with issues of love, truth and mortality. In 1989 Barnes published A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, which was also a non linear novel, which uses a variety of writing styles to call into question the perceived notions of human history and knowledge itself.
Barnes reverted after that to smaller scale novels. In 1991, he published Talking it Over a contemporary love triangle, told in a he said/she said perspective with different characters reflecting over common events.

Works (novels unless otherwise indicated)



★ ''Metroland'' (1980)

★ ''Before She Met Me'' (1982)

★ ''Flaubert's Parrot'' (1984)

★ ''Staring at the Sun'' (1986)

★ ''A History of the World in 10½ Chapters'' (1989)

★ ''Talking it Over'' (1991)

★ ''The Porcupine'' (1992)

★ ''Letters from London'' (Picador, London, 1995) — journalism from ''The New Yorker'', ISBN 0-330-34116-2

★ ''Cross Channel'' (1996) — stories

★ ''England, England'' (1998)

★ ''Love, Etc.'' (2000)

★ ''Something to Declare'' (2002) — essays

★ ''The Pedant in the Kitchen'' (2003) — journalism on cooking

★ ''The Lemon Table'' (2004) — stories

★ ''Arthur & George'' (2005)

Works as Dan Kavanagh



★ ''Duffy'' (1980)

★ ''Fiddle City'' (1981)

★ ''Putting the Boot In'' (1985)

★ ''Going to the Dogs'' (1987)

About Barnes



★ Merritt Moseley, ''Understanding Julian Barnes'', University of South Carolina Press (1997)

★ Vanessa Guignery, ''The fiction of Julian Barnes: A reader's guide to essential criticism'', Palgrave Macmillan (2006)

See also



Edward Pygge, a pseudonym used by Barnes

Eastwick, fictional location in ''Metroland''

External links



Official Website of Julian Barnes

Official Website of Dan Kavanagh (pseudonym)

British Council site

Publisher's Website - includes facts about Barnes and ''Arthur & George''

Guardian Books "Author Page" - with profile and links to further articles.

1991 audio interview with Julian Barnes by Don Swaim





Interview on ''BBC'' ''HARDtalk Extra'' programme - broadcast on 22nd September, 2006

Audio interview from Writing Lab on ''open2.net''

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