This is a list of writers associated with Balliol College, Oxford.
Authors
editNovelists, playwrights and screenwriters
editImage | Name | Join Date | Theme | Comments | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rana Dasgupta | 1990 | globalisation | Tokyo Cancelled | [1]: 239 | |
Zia Haider Rahman | 1987 | trust | In the Light of What We Know | [1]: 554 | |
Amit Chaudhuri | 1987 | creative writing | "A Strange and sublime address" | [1]: 552 | |
Charlotte Jones | 1986 | playwright | The Halcyon WW2 period drama TV series |
[1]: 550 | |
Mick Herron | 1981 | espionage | Winner of the Gold Dagger Slough House novel series Slow Horses TV series |
[1]: 508 | |
Martin Edwards | 1974 | crime novelist | Winner of the Diamond Dagger Lake District Mysteries "a crime writer's crime writer" winning Captain Christmas University Challenge |
[1]: 436 | |
Ian Watson | 1960 | science fiction | Warhammer 40,000 trilogy | [1]: 282 | |
Robert Barnard | 1956 | crime fiction | "Death of an Old Goat" | [1]: 221 | |
Kyril Bonfiglioli | 1955 | comedy thriller | Mortdecai | [1]: 211 | |
W. J. Burley | 1950 | detective story | Wycliffe | [1]: 159 | |
Dan Davin | 1936 | New Zealand | Rhodes Scholar, Fellow "Cliffs of Fall" |
[1]: 57 | |
Robertson Davies | 1935 | trilogy | One of Canada's best-known and most popular authors and one of its most distinguished "men of letters". His prize-winning novels and trilogies explore Jungian psychology, magic and classical myth. | [1]: 50 | |
Anthony Powell | 1923 | book series | His famous series A Dance to the Music of Time (ranked 36th on the BBC list of 100 greatest British novels [2]) earned him the title 'The English Proust'. | [1]: 7 | |
Graham Greene | 1922 | thriller | One of the leading novelists of the 20th century, shortlisted for the Nobel Prize in Literature several times. Best known for his 'Catholic novels' exploring moral and political conflicts, especially the contest between the socialist state and private morality. Awarded OM. | [1]: 5 | |
Nevil Shute | 1918 | dignity of work | His novels A Town Like Alice, Trustee from the Toolroom and On the Beach featured on the 1998 list of the Modern Library 100 Best Novels of the 20th century | [3]: 200 | |
Beverley Nichols | 1916 | emotions | "Down the Garden Path" | [3]: 200 | |
L. P. Hartley | 1915 | family relationships | wrote of morality, society and the loss of innocence The Go-Between was made into a film. |
[3]: 178 | |
Aldous Huxley | 1913 | dystopian fiction | author of Brave New World and The Doors of Perception, widely acknowledged as one of the foremost intellectuals of his time, nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature nine times, and elected Companion of Literature by the Royal Society of Literature in 1962 | [3]: 157 | |
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins | 1881 | adventure fiction | The Prisoner of Zenda | [3]: 9 | |
William Hurrell Mallock | 1869 | novel | Catholic writer who opposed socialism | [4]: 62 |
Biographers including auto-biographers
editImage | Name | Join Date | Theme | Comments | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Howard Marks | 1964 | cannabis dealer | Served 7 years of a 25 year prison sentence in Terre Haute, Indiana after which he wrote the bestseller Mr Nice and became an activist for the legalisation of cannabis | [1]: 326 | |
Ved Mehta | 1956 | author | Fellow, blind autobiographer in several books |
[1]: 227 | |
Warren Rovetch | 1949 | travel writer | Fulbright Scholar The Creaky Traveler |
[1]: 154 [5] | |
Nicholas Mosley | 1946 | novelist | peer, wrote critical biography of his father, the fascist Sir Oswald Mosley | [1]: 122 | |
Francis King | 1941 | novelist | Yesterday Came Suddenly, 1993 autobiography | [1]: 91 | |
Peter Quennell (left) |
1923 | historical writer | "the last genuine example of the English man of letters" | [6]: 32 [7] | |
John Stewart Collis | 1918 | biographer | biography of George Bernard Shaw The Worm Forgives the Plough about working the land in WWII |
[6]: 12 | |
Sir Sidney Lee | 1878 | man of letters | editor, Dictionary of National Biography | [4]: 112 | |
John Addington Symonds | 1857 | biographer | wrote on Percy Bysshe Shelley, Michelangelo et al. | [4]: 24 | |
John Gibson Lockhart | 1809 | novelist biographer |
wrote standard biography of Sir Walter Scott, his father-in-law | [8] | |
John Evelyn | 1637 | diarist | FRS did not graduate |
[9] |
Literary scholars
editImage | Name | Join date |
Field of work | Comments | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
George Steiner | 1950 | comparative literature | Rhodes Scholar, Hon. Fellow Professor at Geneva, Oxford, Harvard Polyglot and polymath |
[10]: 515 | |
David Daiches | 1934 | literary history | Fellow A Critical History of English Literature |
[10]: 120 | |
John Livingston Lowes | 1930 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | first Eastman Professor taught at Washington University St Louis, and Harvard |
[6]: 65 | |
Cyril Connolly | 1922 | literary critic | Enemies of Promise | [6]: 25 | |
Logan Pearsall Smith second right |
1887 | essayist | Words and Idioms "The denunciation of the young is a necessary part of the hygiene of older people, and greatly assists in the circulation of their blood." |
[3]: 21 | |
Henry Watson Fowler | 1880 | lexicographer | A Dictionary of Modern English Usage Concise Oxford English Dictionary "a lexicographical genius" (The Times) |
[3]: 7 | |
Henry Sweet | 1869 | phoneticist | A Handbook of Phonetics | [4]</ref>: 63 | |
John Churton Collins | 1867 | literary critic | Professor, Birmingham The Study of English Literature "a louse in the locks of literature" (Tennyson) |
[4]: 52 | |
John Nichol | 1855 | literary critic | Regius Professor of English Literature, Glasgow Byron, Burns, Carlyle |
[4]: 15 | |
Herbert Coleridge | 1847 | philologist | editor Oxford English Dictionary | [4]: 5 |
Poets
editImage | Name | Join Date |
Known as | Known for | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sir Christopher Ricks | 1953 | FBA literary critic Professor of the Humanities at Boston University. |
practical criticism "exactly the kind of critic every poet dreams of finding" W H Auden |
[6]: 272 | |
F. T. Prince | 1931 | WW2 poet | One of the best-known poems of the Second World War "Soldiers Bathing" |
[6]: 79 | |
Sir Laurence Whistler | 1930 | poet and glass engraver | President of the British Guild of Glass Engravers King's Gold Medal for Poetry |
[6]: 72 | |
Patrick Shaw-Stewart | 1906 | WW1 war poet | "Achilles in the Trench"
I saw a man this morning |
[3]: 115 | |
Julian Grenfell | 1906 | WW1 war poet Biography 1976 by Nicholas Mosley (Balliol 1946) |
DSO "Into Battle" 1915 The thundering line of battle stands, |
[3]: 111 | |
Walter Lyon | 1905 | WW1 war poet | "Easter at Ypres" "I Tracked a Dead Man Down a Trench" |
[3]: 104 | |
Hilaire Belloc | 1892 | Liberal MP for Salford South 1906-10 Catholic literary revival |
"Cautionary Tales for Children"
The nicest child I ever knew Balliol made me, Balliol fed me, |
[3]: 35 | |
Count Eric Stenbock | 1879 DNG | Baltic Swedish poet writing in English | Macabre fiction and poetry "The Song of the Unwept Tear" covered by Marc Almond in Feasting with Panthers Studies of death : romantic tales 1894 |
[11] | |
Henry Charles Beeching | 1878 | Professor of Pastoral Theology KCL 1900-03 Dean of Norwich |
"A paradise of English Poetry" 1893 "The Masque of B-ll—l" 1880 First come I; my name is Jowett. |
[12] | |
William Money Hardinge | 1872 | The 'Balliol Bugger' | gay literature "Clifford Gray: A Romance of Modern Life" 1881 |
[4]: 76 | |
Andrew Cecil Bradley | 1869 | Shakespeare scholar Oxford Professor of Poetry |
"Shakespearean Tragedy" 1904
I dreamt last night that Shakespeare’s Ghost |
[4]: 60 | |
Andrew Lang | 1864 | FBA, polymath poet, novelist, literary critic, anthropologist, folklorist |
Myth, Ritual and Religion (1887) Lang's Fairy Books 1889 - |
[4]: 44 | |
Gerard Manley Hopkins | 1863 | Jesuit priest professor of Classics UCD 1884 |
though publishing little while alive, has experienced posthumous fame that placed him among leading English poets with his prosody establishing him as an innovator, as did his praise of God through vivid use of imagery and nature; by 1930 Hopkins's work was seen as one of the most original literary advances of his century sprung rhythm "the most original poet of the Victorian age." (Ricks 1991) |
[4]: 38 | |
Algernon Charles Swinburne | 1855 (rusticated 1859) | poet-novelist-critic | nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature every year from 1903 to 1909 | [4]: 18 | |
Charles Stuart Calverley (born Blayds) | 1849 (expelled 1850) | Fellow, Christ's Cambridge | "Ode to Tobacco" (1862) is on a bronze plaque in Cambridge market square | [4]: 6 | |
Francis Turner Palgrave | 1842 | anthologist Oxford Professor or Poetry |
Golden Treasury | [4]: 4 | |
Matthew Arnold | 1840 | cultural critic sage writer Oxford Professor of Poetry school inspector |
The Scholar Gipsy | [4]: 3 | |
John Campbell Shairp | 1839 | pastoral poet Professor of Humanity, St Andrews Oxford Professor of Poetry |
"The Poetic Interpretation of Nature" 1877 | [4]: 3 | |
Arthur Hugh Clough | 1836 | secretarial assistant to Florence Nightingale | his sister and daughter both became principals of Newnham College, Cambridge | [4]: 2 | |
Robert Southey | 1792 DNG | Romantic Poet Poet Laureate |
Goldilocks and the Three Bears
But what good came of it at last? |
[13] | |
Sir Edward Dyer | (1561) | Courtier and Poet Chancellor of the Order of the Garter MP for Somerset 1589- |
a candidate in the Shakespearean authorship question (Alden Brooks 1943) | [14] |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Balliol College Register (Sixth Edition) by John Jones and Catherine Willbery 1993
- ^ Ciabattari, Jane (7 December 2015). "The 100 greatest British novels". BBC. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Balliol College Register (Third Edition) by Ivo Elliott 1953
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Balliol College Register (Second Edition) by Ivo Elliott 1934
- ^ "Warren Rovetch Obituary (1926 - 2017) The Daily Camera". Legacy.com. Retrieved 2022-08-12.
- ^ a b c d e f g Balliol College Register (Fifth Edition) by John Jones and Sally Viney 1983
- ^ 'Sir Peter Quennell', in The Times, 29 October 1993, p. 23.
- ^ Lockhart, John Gibson (2004). "Bio". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). OUP. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16904. Retrieved 24 May 2008. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Evelyn, John (2004). "Bio". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). OUP. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8996. Retrieved 3 Jan 2008. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ a b Balliol College Register (Seventh Edition) by Tom Bewley and John Jones. 2005.
- ^ A Brief Life of Count Stenbock retrieved 25 November 2024
- ^ UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE' Daily News (London, England), Tuesday, 29 June 1880; Issue 10670
- ^ Biography of Robert Southey accessed 25 November 2024
- ^ According to Anthony Wood (quoted in ONDB) he went to either Balliol or Broadgates Hall. He is listed as a student at Oxford in Fosters, but no college is given. From this evidence, there is no more than a 50% chance he was at Balliol.