meanings of John Wyndham definition of John Wyndham books about John Wyndham references on John Wyndham articles about John Wyndham web search for John Wyndham dreams about John Wyndham
 John Wyndham - Definition 

John Wyndham (July 10, 1903 - March 11, 1969) was the pen name used by the apocalyptically oriented British science fiction writer John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris.

Contents

Introduction

In his earlier writings, Wyndham used various combinations of his names, such as John Benyon or Lucas Parkes. In one example, The Outward Urge, he actually used both the names "John Wyndham" and "Lucas Parkes", pretending to be two collaborating authors.

His book The Day of the Triffids was possibly the origin of the style of British science fiction described as the "cosy catastrophe": a genre in which everyone is killed except for a handful of middle-class survivors, who from the ashes of civilisation secure for themselves a Savile Row wardrobe and a sporty roadster or two. This was his most famous book and gave the word "triffid" to the English language, though several of his other books are proving to be equally durable.

The Midwich Cuckoos depicts a small village in which, during 24 hours when the inhabitants are unconscious and the village is cut off from the outside world, all the women of child-bearing age mysteriously become pregnant, eventually giving birth to golden eyed children with telepathic abilities. It was filmed as Village of the Damned (1960), with (unusually for a science fiction film) the script being fairly faithful to the book. There is also a remake in colour by John Carpenter, starring Christopher Reeve in one of his last film roles before he was paralysed in a riding accident. There have also been several radio adaptations by the BBC, the most recent in 2003. Wyndham began work on a sequel novel, Midwich Main, which he abandoned after only a few chapters.

The Chrysalids, also known as Re-Birth, depicts a rural community in Newfoundland, several centuries after some nuclear war, with a religious obsession about eliminating those born with any genetic abnormalities. It follows a small group of cousins who realize their telepathic abilities have to be hidden, and their troubles when these are discovered. The novel was adapted as a BBC Radio 4 play in the early 1980s.

All of Wyndham's novels have an air of old-fashioned Englishness which is either quaint or stuffy, depending upon one's point of view.

Biography

Real name John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris, Wyndham was born in the village of Knowle just outside Birmingham, England. He lived in Edgbaston untill he was eight years old at which point his parents, George Beynon Harris and Gertrude Parkes, separated, he and his brother, the writer Vivian Beynon Harris, had no settled home after this time.

He grew up in a series of English boarding schools, staying longest at Bedales (1918-1921), which he left at the age of 18.

Despite this, his brother Vivian says: "He had a wonderful childhood and teenage time."

After leaving school he studied farming for a while, changed his mind about going to Oxford University and tried several ways of earning a living, but mostly relying on an allowance from his family. He eventually turned to writing for money in 1925. Throughout the 1930s he wrote many stories, mainly for American periodicals. He wrote some detective stories as well as science fiction.

Between 1940 and 1943, Wyndham was a civil servant with the British Government, working in censorship. He went into the army, where he was a Corporal Cipher Operator in the Royal Signal Corps, in time to participate in the Normandy landings.

In 1963 he married Grace Wilson. The couple lived out their lives near Petersfield, Hampshire, just outside the grounds of Bedales School.

Bibliography

Novels

Posthumous novel

  • Web (1979 - published by the executors of his estate, ten years after his death)

Collections

  • Jizzle (1954)
  • The Seeds of Time (1956)
  • The Outward Urge (1959) (by "John Wyndham" and "Lucas Parkes")
  • Consider Her Ways and Others (1961)

Posthumous collections

External links

  • The John Wyndham Archive (http://www.liv.ac.uk/~asawyer/wyndham.html) - Official Archive at the University of Liverpool
  • Guardian article on John Wyndham (http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,5917,1347003,00.html)
  • "Vivisection" (http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/78/ketterer78art.htm): Schoolboy "John Wyndham's" First Publication?
  • Read "Consider her Ways" (http://www.scifi.com/scifiction/classics/classics_archive/wyndham/wyndham1.html) online.

cs:John Wyndham nl:john Wyndham de:John Wyndham fr:John Wyndham ja:ジョン・ウィンダム sk:John Wyndham



Copyright 2008 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  ::  Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "John Wyndham".