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BIOGRAPHY

Novelist Graham Swift was born in London in 1949. He was educated at Dulwich College, Queens' College,

Cambridge, and York University. He was nominated as one of the 20 'Best of Young British Novelists' in the Book

Marketing Council's promotion in 1983.



He is the author of eight novels. The first, The Sweet Shop Owner (1980), is narrated by disillusioned shopkeeper

Willy Chapman, and unfolds over the course of a single day in June. The narrator of his second novel, Shuttlecock

(1981), winner of the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, becomes obsessed with his father's experiences during the

Second World War.



Waterland, his acclaimed third novel, was published in 1983. Narrated by history teacher Tom Crick, it describes

his youth spent in the Norfolk fens during the Second World War. These personal memories are woven into a

greater history of the area, slowly revealing the seeds of a family legacy that threatens his marriage. The book won

the GuardianFiction Prize and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. It was followed by Out of this World(1988), the

story of a photojournalist and his estranged daughter, and Ever After (1992), in which a university professor

makes a traumatic discovery about his career.



Swift's sixth novel, Last Orders (1996), which won the Booker Prize for Fiction and the James Tait Black Memorial

Prize (for fiction), recounts a journey begun in a pub in London's East End by four friends intent on fulfilling a

promise to scatter the ashes of their dead drinking-partner in the sea. A film adaptation of the novel starring

Michael Caine and Bob Hoskins was first screened in 2001. His novel, The Light of Day (2003), is the story of a

murder, a love affair and a disgraced former policeman turned private detective. Tomorrow (2007), explores

complex themes of parenthood, coupledom and identity via the personal thoughts and memories of the

protagonist, Paula, as she lies awake one night in bed.



His first non-fiction book is Making an Elephant: Writing from Within (2009).



Graham Swift is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He lives in London.




   Top of page



GENRES (IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER)

Fiction, Short stories




BIBLIOGRAPHY

The Sweet Shop Owner         Allen Lane, 1980
Shuttlecock     Allen Lane, 1981

Learning to Swim and Other Stories          London Magazine Editions, 1982

Waterland     Heinemann, 1983

The Magic Wheel: An Anthology of Fishing in Literature             (co-editor with David Profumo)   Picador /

Heinemann, 1985

Out of this World    Viking, 1988

Ever After    Picador, 1992

Last Orders     Picador, 1996

The Light of Day     Hamish Hamilton, 2003

Tomorrow      Picador, 2007

Making an Elephant: Writing from Within            Picador, 2009



  BUY BOOKS BY GRAHAM SWIFT AT AMAZON.CO.UK

  Top of page



PRIZES AND AWARDS

1981     Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize       Shuttlecock

1983     Booker Prize for Fiction    (shortlist)   Waterland

1983     Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize       Waterland

1983     Guardian Fiction Prize     Waterland

1983     Premio Grinzane Cavour (Italy)         Waterland

1983     Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize         Waterland

1992     Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger (France)        Ever After

1996     Booker Prize for Fiction    Last Orders

1996     James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction)         (joint winner)   Last Orders




  Top of page



CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE

When Graham Swift was awarded the Booker Prize for Fiction for his sixth novel Last Orders in 1996, it was seen

by many critics and readers as long overdue acknowledgement of his status as a contemporary novelist. Graham

Swift's novels are all ambitious in their own ways in their thematic and narrative scope. Swift tackles ideas of

narrative, history, conflicts between the generations, the place of an individual in the larger scale of events. His

novels are frequently organised around an underlying mystery, and his oblique and non-linear narrative technique

lends itself to a gradual revelation of events in a manner reminiscent at times of the nineteenth century detective

novel.
Swift revels in complex narrative strategies; his characters debate, and their accounts reflect, a rejection of the

chronologically linear view of narrative. Swift questions the nature of narrative through questioning the reality of

history, a theme that is central toShuttlecock (1981), Waterland (1983), Out of This World (1988), and Ever

After (1992). In all these novels Swift considers the nature of the relationship between personal and public

histories, between self-created and orderly narratives and the disorderly nature of actuality. In Shuttlecock the

protagonist Prentis struggles to identify how much reality there is in his father's self-declared World War II

heroism. In a similar fashion in Ever After the central character, Bill Unwin, becomes aware that his own vision is

colouring his allegedly factual reconstruction of the life of his great-great grandfather from his ancestor's

nineteenth-century notebooks. In Waterland Crick the history teacher interlaces an account of the seminal events

of his own life with an account of events and personalities from the Industrial Revolution to the present. Crick

interweaves the personal, the regional and the national, and sets all these against the historical perspective of the

natural world and the landscape of the Fens. In Out of This Worlddifferent generations look back from differing

stances on the professional activities of their parents in wartime situations, creating narratives which are mediated

through memory and personal resentments so that they have no objective existence.



History as narrative is for Swift primarily a personal rather than a factual reality, a fact reflected in his use of a

predominantly first person narration in what is almost a stream of consciousness manner. Story telling is central

to Waterland, as Crick debates the very nature of history and the relationship between past and present. The novel

is essentially a dramatic monologue, the history teacher in the classroom recounting his own life story as well as

that of his ancestors. Swift's narrators generally interact to a minimal degree with their addressees, although the

awareness of their presence can create a distinctive tone of voice. The schoolboys of Waterland are addressed

directly, if not always aloud, as 'children', and the fact that Crick's tale is full of adult horrors (suicide, murder and

abortion) makes the contrast between his narrative mode and the tale he tells all the more unsettling.

Both Shuttlecock and Ever After (1992) play with the idea of the narrative within the

narrative. Shuttlecock contains the memoirs of the apparently heroic father and his World War II exploits. The

narrator in Ever After finds himself in possession of his great-great grandfather's nineteenth century letters, and

temporal boundaries are further blurred by the way in which the narrator within the narration becomes a presence

in the novel's present tense.



Narrative in Last Orders is carried by an even greater multiplicity of voices. The four central characters of the novel

come together to carry out the last wish of their recently deceased friend by scattering his ashes from the end of

Margate Pier. Their day is presented in an interwoven series of first person narratives, shifting between times and

tenses, as memories of and revelations about the dead man are woven into the recriminations and irritations of

their immediate situation. The blackly farcical events of a day in which four men come together in a procession

towards the final resting-place of their friend is unmistakably reminiscent of the Hades episode in Joyce's Ulysses;

Swift creates something of the same sense of unease, coloured with the same grim humour.



The significance of history and the presence and influence of earlier narratives is evident in the way in which Swift
himself makes use of previous literary traditions in his work.Last Orders alludes not only to Ulysses but also to

Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Waterland, set in the East Anglican Fens, conjures up the similar landscape of Great

Expectations, and in its epigraph explicitly draws on Dickens to reinforce the powerful presence of the flat

marshland. Also in the background of the novel is George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss, with its lock setting and

emphasis on the place and power of water in man's working life.Ever After, with its account of a recovered

nineteenth-century manuscript, and the depiction of the rivalries and intrigue of the academic world, presents a

dark and conspiratorial world reminiscent of Henry James's The Aspern Papers.



Swift's emphasis on personal history and the subjective nature of memory leads him to raise questions about the

differing perspectives of the generations. In Shuttlecock three generations of the Prentis family meditate actively

on their interactions, while in the fourth generation the central protagonist's sons are a passive and silently critical

presence. Women are often peripheral in Swift's novels to the interaction between the men. In Last Orders the

dead man's wife is present chiefly as adjunct to and cause of the competition and secrecy among the four men.

Relations between fathers and sons in particular form a recurrent strand in Swift's novels; the way in which macho

posturing, whether over wars, careers or women, is crucial in creating these relationships forms a central strand

of Shuttlecock, Out of this World and Last Orders.



Graham Swift's novels deal with the extraordinary in the ordinary. In their settings, language and characterisations

Swift's novels are sparse and consciously drab. His protagonists are often ordinary men, middle-aged clerks or

teachers or accountants. In their voices Swift ponders some of the bigger issues of life - death, birth, marriage and

sex - as well as the everyday politics of relationships and friendships. His intricate narrative patterns raise

questions about the relationship between personal histories and world events, between personal and public

perceptions. He highlights the impossibility of creating a single objective reality, fictional or otherwise, and through

fiction investigates the very nature of fiction.



Cora Lindsay, 2002



   Top of page



AUTHOR STATEMENT

'I believe it would be a bad day for a writer if he could say, "I know exactly what I'm doing", and I am wary of

making statements about my work. If I have any abiding allegiance in my writing it is to the power of the

imagination, and I hope my imagination will always surprise and stretch me and take me along unsuspected paths,

just as I hope it will continue to bring me up against certain things which I will have to recognise as my own

peculiar territory - though that too is a process of discovery, not of preconception.



I have no wariness about the potential of fiction as such, or the privilege and joy (despite many an agony!) of

writing it. Where else can you have such licence of expression? Where else can you combine so richly and
intimately the world of ideas with the world of concrete reality? And where else can you know - or at least hope -

that for each individual reader, each act of collaboration between author and reader, the experience will be

something different? I have enormous faith in that invisible collaborative experience, though when I write I never

think of the reader. Fiction seems to me only to do in a specialised, concentrated way what we all need to do: to

enter, in our minds, experiences other than our own. That is no small or simple thing - all our moral and social

pretensions rest upon it. So I have no wariness about fiction's importance either.'




CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE

When Graham Swift was awarded the Booker Prize for Fiction for his sixth novel Last Orders in 1996, it was seen

by many critics and readers as long overdue acknowledgement of his status as a contemporary novelist. Graham

Swift's novels are all ambitious in their own ways in their thematic and narrative scope. Swift tackles ideas of

narrative, history, conflicts between the generations, the place of an individual in the larger scale of events. His

novels are frequently organised around an underlying mystery, and his oblique and non-linear narrative technique

lends itself to a gradual revelation of events in a manner reminiscent at times of the nineteenth century detective

novel.



Swift revels in complex narrative strategies; his characters debate, and their accounts reflect, a rejection of the

chronologically linear view of narrative. Swift questions the nature of narrative through questioning the reality of

history, a theme that is central toShuttlecock (1981), Waterland (1983), Out of This World (1988), and Ever

After (1992). In all these novels Swift considers the nature of the relationship between personal and public

histories, between self-created and orderly narratives and the disorderly nature of actuality. In Shuttlecock the

protagonist Prentis struggles to identify how much reality there is in his father's self-declared World War II

heroism. In a similar fashion in Ever After the central character, Bill Unwin, becomes aware that his own vision is

colouring his allegedly factual reconstruction of the life of his great-great grandfather from his ancestor's

nineteenth-century notebooks. In Waterland Crick the history teacher interlaces an account of the seminal events

of his own life with an account of events and personalities from the Industrial Revolution to the present. Crick

interweaves the personal, the regional and the national, and sets all these against the historical perspective of the

natural world and the landscape of the Fens. In Out of This Worlddifferent generations look back from differing

stances on the professional activities of their parents in wartime situations, creating narratives which are mediated

through memory and personal resentments so that they have no objective existence.



History as narrative is for Swift primarily a personal rather than a factual reality, a fact reflected in his use of a

predominantly first person narration in what is almost a stream of consciousness manner. Story telling is central
to Waterland, as Crick debates the very nature of history and the relationship between past and present. The novel

is essentially a dramatic monologue, the history teacher in the classroom recounting his own life story as well as

that of his ancestors. Swift's narrators generally interact to a minimal degree with their addressees, although the

awareness of their presence can create a distinctive tone of voice. The schoolboys of Waterland are addressed

directly, if not always aloud, as 'children', and the fact that Crick's tale is full of adult horrors (suicide, murder and

abortion) makes the contrast between his narrative mode and the tale he tells all the more unsettling.

Both Shuttlecock and Ever After (1992) play with the idea of the narrative within the

narrative. Shuttlecock contains the memoirs of the apparently heroic father and his World War II exploits. The

narrator in Ever After finds himself in possession of his great-great grandfather's nineteenth century letters, and

temporal boundaries are further blurred by the way in which the narrator within the narration becomes a presence

in the novel's present tense.



Narrative in Last Orders is carried by an even greater multiplicity of voices. The four central characters of the novel

come together to carry out the last wish of their recently deceased friend by scattering his ashes from the end of

Margate Pier. Their day is presented in an interwoven series of first person narratives, shifting between times and

tenses, as memories of and revelations about the dead man are woven into the recriminations and irritations of

their immediate situation. The blackly farcical events of a day in which four men come together in a procession

towards the final resting-place of their friend is unmistakably reminiscent of the Hades episode in Joyce's Ulysses;

Swift creates something of the same sense of unease, coloured with the same grim humour.



The significance of history and the presence and influence of earlier narratives is evident in the way in which Swift

himself makes use of previous literary traditions in his work.Last Orders alludes not only to Ulysses but also to

Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Waterland, set in the East Anglican Fens, conjures up the similar landscape of Great

Expectations, and in its epigraph explicitly draws on Dickens to reinforce the powerful presence of the flat

marshland. Also in the background of the novel is George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss, with its lock setting and

emphasis on the place and power of water in man's working life.Ever After, with its account of a recovered

nineteenth-century manuscript, and the depiction of the rivalries and intrigue of the academic world, presents a

dark and conspiratorial world reminiscent of Henry James's The Aspern Papers.



Swift's emphasis on personal history and the subjective nature of memory leads him to raise questions about the

differing perspectives of the generations. In Shuttlecock three generations of the Prentis family meditate actively

on their interactions, while in the fourth generation the central protagonist's sons are a passive and silently critical

presence. Women are often peripheral in Swift's novels to the interaction between the men. In Last Orders the

dead man's wife is present chiefly as adjunct to and cause of the competition and secrecy among the four men.

Relations between fathers and sons in particular form a recurrent strand in Swift's novels; the way in which macho

posturing, whether over wars, careers or women, is crucial in creating these relationships forms a central strand

of Shuttlecock, Out of this World and Last Orders.
Graham Swift's novels deal with the extraordinary in the ordinary. In their settings, language and characterisations

Swift's novels are sparse and consciously drab. His protagonists are often ordinary men, middle-aged clerks or

teachers or accountants. In their voices Swift ponders some of the bigger issues of life - death, birth, marriage and

sex - as well as the everyday politics of relationships and friendships. His intricate narrative patterns raise

questions about the relationship between personal histories and world events, between personal and public

perceptions. He highlights the impossibility of creating a single objective reality, fictional or otherwise, and through

fiction investigates the very nature of fiction.



Cora Lindsay, 2002



   Top of page



AUTHOR STATEMENT

'I believe it would be a bad day for a writer if he could say, "I know exactly what I'm doing", and I am wary of

making statements about my work. If I have any abiding allegiance in my writing it is to the power of the

imagination, and I hope my imagination will always surprise and stretch me and take me along unsuspected paths,

just as I hope it will continue to bring me up against certain things which I will have to recognise as my own

peculiar territory - though that too is a process of discovery, not of preconception.



I have no wariness about the potential of fiction as such, or the privilege and joy (despite many an agony!) of

writing it. Where else can you have such licence of expression? Where else can you combine so richly and

intimately the world of ideas with the world of concrete reality? And where else can you know - or at least hope -

that for each individual reader, each act of collaboration between author and reader, the experience will be

something different? I have enormous faith in that invisible collaborative experience, though when I write I never

think of the reader. Fiction seems to me only to do in a specialised, concentrated way what we all need to do: to

enter, in our minds, experiences other than our own. That is no small or simple thing - all our moral and social

pretensions rest upon it. So I have no wariness about fiction's importance either.'




Source: British Source

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Biography of Graham Swift

  • 1. BIOGRAPHY Novelist Graham Swift was born in London in 1949. He was educated at Dulwich College, Queens' College, Cambridge, and York University. He was nominated as one of the 20 'Best of Young British Novelists' in the Book Marketing Council's promotion in 1983. He is the author of eight novels. The first, The Sweet Shop Owner (1980), is narrated by disillusioned shopkeeper Willy Chapman, and unfolds over the course of a single day in June. The narrator of his second novel, Shuttlecock (1981), winner of the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, becomes obsessed with his father's experiences during the Second World War. Waterland, his acclaimed third novel, was published in 1983. Narrated by history teacher Tom Crick, it describes his youth spent in the Norfolk fens during the Second World War. These personal memories are woven into a greater history of the area, slowly revealing the seeds of a family legacy that threatens his marriage. The book won the GuardianFiction Prize and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. It was followed by Out of this World(1988), the story of a photojournalist and his estranged daughter, and Ever After (1992), in which a university professor makes a traumatic discovery about his career. Swift's sixth novel, Last Orders (1996), which won the Booker Prize for Fiction and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction), recounts a journey begun in a pub in London's East End by four friends intent on fulfilling a promise to scatter the ashes of their dead drinking-partner in the sea. A film adaptation of the novel starring Michael Caine and Bob Hoskins was first screened in 2001. His novel, The Light of Day (2003), is the story of a murder, a love affair and a disgraced former policeman turned private detective. Tomorrow (2007), explores complex themes of parenthood, coupledom and identity via the personal thoughts and memories of the protagonist, Paula, as she lies awake one night in bed. His first non-fiction book is Making an Elephant: Writing from Within (2009). Graham Swift is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He lives in London. Top of page GENRES (IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER) Fiction, Short stories BIBLIOGRAPHY The Sweet Shop Owner Allen Lane, 1980
  • 2. Shuttlecock Allen Lane, 1981 Learning to Swim and Other Stories London Magazine Editions, 1982 Waterland Heinemann, 1983 The Magic Wheel: An Anthology of Fishing in Literature (co-editor with David Profumo) Picador / Heinemann, 1985 Out of this World Viking, 1988 Ever After Picador, 1992 Last Orders Picador, 1996 The Light of Day Hamish Hamilton, 2003 Tomorrow Picador, 2007 Making an Elephant: Writing from Within Picador, 2009 BUY BOOKS BY GRAHAM SWIFT AT AMAZON.CO.UK Top of page PRIZES AND AWARDS 1981 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize Shuttlecock 1983 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Waterland 1983 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize Waterland 1983 Guardian Fiction Prize Waterland 1983 Premio Grinzane Cavour (Italy) Waterland 1983 Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize Waterland 1992 Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger (France) Ever After 1996 Booker Prize for Fiction Last Orders 1996 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for fiction) (joint winner) Last Orders Top of page CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE When Graham Swift was awarded the Booker Prize for Fiction for his sixth novel Last Orders in 1996, it was seen by many critics and readers as long overdue acknowledgement of his status as a contemporary novelist. Graham Swift's novels are all ambitious in their own ways in their thematic and narrative scope. Swift tackles ideas of narrative, history, conflicts between the generations, the place of an individual in the larger scale of events. His novels are frequently organised around an underlying mystery, and his oblique and non-linear narrative technique lends itself to a gradual revelation of events in a manner reminiscent at times of the nineteenth century detective novel.
  • 3. Swift revels in complex narrative strategies; his characters debate, and their accounts reflect, a rejection of the chronologically linear view of narrative. Swift questions the nature of narrative through questioning the reality of history, a theme that is central toShuttlecock (1981), Waterland (1983), Out of This World (1988), and Ever After (1992). In all these novels Swift considers the nature of the relationship between personal and public histories, between self-created and orderly narratives and the disorderly nature of actuality. In Shuttlecock the protagonist Prentis struggles to identify how much reality there is in his father's self-declared World War II heroism. In a similar fashion in Ever After the central character, Bill Unwin, becomes aware that his own vision is colouring his allegedly factual reconstruction of the life of his great-great grandfather from his ancestor's nineteenth-century notebooks. In Waterland Crick the history teacher interlaces an account of the seminal events of his own life with an account of events and personalities from the Industrial Revolution to the present. Crick interweaves the personal, the regional and the national, and sets all these against the historical perspective of the natural world and the landscape of the Fens. In Out of This Worlddifferent generations look back from differing stances on the professional activities of their parents in wartime situations, creating narratives which are mediated through memory and personal resentments so that they have no objective existence. History as narrative is for Swift primarily a personal rather than a factual reality, a fact reflected in his use of a predominantly first person narration in what is almost a stream of consciousness manner. Story telling is central to Waterland, as Crick debates the very nature of history and the relationship between past and present. The novel is essentially a dramatic monologue, the history teacher in the classroom recounting his own life story as well as that of his ancestors. Swift's narrators generally interact to a minimal degree with their addressees, although the awareness of their presence can create a distinctive tone of voice. The schoolboys of Waterland are addressed directly, if not always aloud, as 'children', and the fact that Crick's tale is full of adult horrors (suicide, murder and abortion) makes the contrast between his narrative mode and the tale he tells all the more unsettling. Both Shuttlecock and Ever After (1992) play with the idea of the narrative within the narrative. Shuttlecock contains the memoirs of the apparently heroic father and his World War II exploits. The narrator in Ever After finds himself in possession of his great-great grandfather's nineteenth century letters, and temporal boundaries are further blurred by the way in which the narrator within the narration becomes a presence in the novel's present tense. Narrative in Last Orders is carried by an even greater multiplicity of voices. The four central characters of the novel come together to carry out the last wish of their recently deceased friend by scattering his ashes from the end of Margate Pier. Their day is presented in an interwoven series of first person narratives, shifting between times and tenses, as memories of and revelations about the dead man are woven into the recriminations and irritations of their immediate situation. The blackly farcical events of a day in which four men come together in a procession towards the final resting-place of their friend is unmistakably reminiscent of the Hades episode in Joyce's Ulysses; Swift creates something of the same sense of unease, coloured with the same grim humour. The significance of history and the presence and influence of earlier narratives is evident in the way in which Swift
  • 4. himself makes use of previous literary traditions in his work.Last Orders alludes not only to Ulysses but also to Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Waterland, set in the East Anglican Fens, conjures up the similar landscape of Great Expectations, and in its epigraph explicitly draws on Dickens to reinforce the powerful presence of the flat marshland. Also in the background of the novel is George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss, with its lock setting and emphasis on the place and power of water in man's working life.Ever After, with its account of a recovered nineteenth-century manuscript, and the depiction of the rivalries and intrigue of the academic world, presents a dark and conspiratorial world reminiscent of Henry James's The Aspern Papers. Swift's emphasis on personal history and the subjective nature of memory leads him to raise questions about the differing perspectives of the generations. In Shuttlecock three generations of the Prentis family meditate actively on their interactions, while in the fourth generation the central protagonist's sons are a passive and silently critical presence. Women are often peripheral in Swift's novels to the interaction between the men. In Last Orders the dead man's wife is present chiefly as adjunct to and cause of the competition and secrecy among the four men. Relations between fathers and sons in particular form a recurrent strand in Swift's novels; the way in which macho posturing, whether over wars, careers or women, is crucial in creating these relationships forms a central strand of Shuttlecock, Out of this World and Last Orders. Graham Swift's novels deal with the extraordinary in the ordinary. In their settings, language and characterisations Swift's novels are sparse and consciously drab. His protagonists are often ordinary men, middle-aged clerks or teachers or accountants. In their voices Swift ponders some of the bigger issues of life - death, birth, marriage and sex - as well as the everyday politics of relationships and friendships. His intricate narrative patterns raise questions about the relationship between personal histories and world events, between personal and public perceptions. He highlights the impossibility of creating a single objective reality, fictional or otherwise, and through fiction investigates the very nature of fiction. Cora Lindsay, 2002 Top of page AUTHOR STATEMENT 'I believe it would be a bad day for a writer if he could say, "I know exactly what I'm doing", and I am wary of making statements about my work. If I have any abiding allegiance in my writing it is to the power of the imagination, and I hope my imagination will always surprise and stretch me and take me along unsuspected paths, just as I hope it will continue to bring me up against certain things which I will have to recognise as my own peculiar territory - though that too is a process of discovery, not of preconception. I have no wariness about the potential of fiction as such, or the privilege and joy (despite many an agony!) of writing it. Where else can you have such licence of expression? Where else can you combine so richly and
  • 5. intimately the world of ideas with the world of concrete reality? And where else can you know - or at least hope - that for each individual reader, each act of collaboration between author and reader, the experience will be something different? I have enormous faith in that invisible collaborative experience, though when I write I never think of the reader. Fiction seems to me only to do in a specialised, concentrated way what we all need to do: to enter, in our minds, experiences other than our own. That is no small or simple thing - all our moral and social pretensions rest upon it. So I have no wariness about fiction's importance either.' CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE When Graham Swift was awarded the Booker Prize for Fiction for his sixth novel Last Orders in 1996, it was seen by many critics and readers as long overdue acknowledgement of his status as a contemporary novelist. Graham Swift's novels are all ambitious in their own ways in their thematic and narrative scope. Swift tackles ideas of narrative, history, conflicts between the generations, the place of an individual in the larger scale of events. His novels are frequently organised around an underlying mystery, and his oblique and non-linear narrative technique lends itself to a gradual revelation of events in a manner reminiscent at times of the nineteenth century detective novel. Swift revels in complex narrative strategies; his characters debate, and their accounts reflect, a rejection of the chronologically linear view of narrative. Swift questions the nature of narrative through questioning the reality of history, a theme that is central toShuttlecock (1981), Waterland (1983), Out of This World (1988), and Ever After (1992). In all these novels Swift considers the nature of the relationship between personal and public histories, between self-created and orderly narratives and the disorderly nature of actuality. In Shuttlecock the protagonist Prentis struggles to identify how much reality there is in his father's self-declared World War II heroism. In a similar fashion in Ever After the central character, Bill Unwin, becomes aware that his own vision is colouring his allegedly factual reconstruction of the life of his great-great grandfather from his ancestor's nineteenth-century notebooks. In Waterland Crick the history teacher interlaces an account of the seminal events of his own life with an account of events and personalities from the Industrial Revolution to the present. Crick interweaves the personal, the regional and the national, and sets all these against the historical perspective of the natural world and the landscape of the Fens. In Out of This Worlddifferent generations look back from differing stances on the professional activities of their parents in wartime situations, creating narratives which are mediated through memory and personal resentments so that they have no objective existence. History as narrative is for Swift primarily a personal rather than a factual reality, a fact reflected in his use of a predominantly first person narration in what is almost a stream of consciousness manner. Story telling is central
  • 6. to Waterland, as Crick debates the very nature of history and the relationship between past and present. The novel is essentially a dramatic monologue, the history teacher in the classroom recounting his own life story as well as that of his ancestors. Swift's narrators generally interact to a minimal degree with their addressees, although the awareness of their presence can create a distinctive tone of voice. The schoolboys of Waterland are addressed directly, if not always aloud, as 'children', and the fact that Crick's tale is full of adult horrors (suicide, murder and abortion) makes the contrast between his narrative mode and the tale he tells all the more unsettling. Both Shuttlecock and Ever After (1992) play with the idea of the narrative within the narrative. Shuttlecock contains the memoirs of the apparently heroic father and his World War II exploits. The narrator in Ever After finds himself in possession of his great-great grandfather's nineteenth century letters, and temporal boundaries are further blurred by the way in which the narrator within the narration becomes a presence in the novel's present tense. Narrative in Last Orders is carried by an even greater multiplicity of voices. The four central characters of the novel come together to carry out the last wish of their recently deceased friend by scattering his ashes from the end of Margate Pier. Their day is presented in an interwoven series of first person narratives, shifting between times and tenses, as memories of and revelations about the dead man are woven into the recriminations and irritations of their immediate situation. The blackly farcical events of a day in which four men come together in a procession towards the final resting-place of their friend is unmistakably reminiscent of the Hades episode in Joyce's Ulysses; Swift creates something of the same sense of unease, coloured with the same grim humour. The significance of history and the presence and influence of earlier narratives is evident in the way in which Swift himself makes use of previous literary traditions in his work.Last Orders alludes not only to Ulysses but also to Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Waterland, set in the East Anglican Fens, conjures up the similar landscape of Great Expectations, and in its epigraph explicitly draws on Dickens to reinforce the powerful presence of the flat marshland. Also in the background of the novel is George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss, with its lock setting and emphasis on the place and power of water in man's working life.Ever After, with its account of a recovered nineteenth-century manuscript, and the depiction of the rivalries and intrigue of the academic world, presents a dark and conspiratorial world reminiscent of Henry James's The Aspern Papers. Swift's emphasis on personal history and the subjective nature of memory leads him to raise questions about the differing perspectives of the generations. In Shuttlecock three generations of the Prentis family meditate actively on their interactions, while in the fourth generation the central protagonist's sons are a passive and silently critical presence. Women are often peripheral in Swift's novels to the interaction between the men. In Last Orders the dead man's wife is present chiefly as adjunct to and cause of the competition and secrecy among the four men. Relations between fathers and sons in particular form a recurrent strand in Swift's novels; the way in which macho posturing, whether over wars, careers or women, is crucial in creating these relationships forms a central strand of Shuttlecock, Out of this World and Last Orders.
  • 7. Graham Swift's novels deal with the extraordinary in the ordinary. In their settings, language and characterisations Swift's novels are sparse and consciously drab. His protagonists are often ordinary men, middle-aged clerks or teachers or accountants. In their voices Swift ponders some of the bigger issues of life - death, birth, marriage and sex - as well as the everyday politics of relationships and friendships. His intricate narrative patterns raise questions about the relationship between personal histories and world events, between personal and public perceptions. He highlights the impossibility of creating a single objective reality, fictional or otherwise, and through fiction investigates the very nature of fiction. Cora Lindsay, 2002 Top of page AUTHOR STATEMENT 'I believe it would be a bad day for a writer if he could say, "I know exactly what I'm doing", and I am wary of making statements about my work. If I have any abiding allegiance in my writing it is to the power of the imagination, and I hope my imagination will always surprise and stretch me and take me along unsuspected paths, just as I hope it will continue to bring me up against certain things which I will have to recognise as my own peculiar territory - though that too is a process of discovery, not of preconception. I have no wariness about the potential of fiction as such, or the privilege and joy (despite many an agony!) of writing it. Where else can you have such licence of expression? Where else can you combine so richly and intimately the world of ideas with the world of concrete reality? And where else can you know - or at least hope - that for each individual reader, each act of collaboration between author and reader, the experience will be something different? I have enormous faith in that invisible collaborative experience, though when I write I never think of the reader. Fiction seems to me only to do in a specialised, concentrated way what we all need to do: to enter, in our minds, experiences other than our own. That is no small or simple thing - all our moral and social pretensions rest upon it. So I have no wariness about fiction's importance either.' Source: British Source