Kingsley Amis
Famous as | Poet, novelist and lecturer |
Born on | 16 April 1922 |
Born in | Clap ham, South London |
Died on | 22 October 1995 |
Nationality | United Kingdom |
Works & Achievements | Lucky Jim |
Childhood & Education
Kingsley Amis was born on 16 April 1922 in Clap ham, a place in
south London. His father, William Robert Amis was a mustard
manufacturer’s clerk. Kingsley received his primary education from the
City of London School and enrolled into St. John’s College, Oxford in
year 1941. After less than a year in 1942, he was admitted into army
service, where he served in the Royal Corps of Signals during the Second
World War. With the ending of the war in 1945, he returned to Oxford
and resumed his studies and got a distinction in English. In 1946,
Kingsley joined the Communist Party of Great Britain.
Early Life
Kingsley was appointed as lecturer at the University of Wales
Swansea in 1948, where he worked till the year 1961. It was then that he
wrote his first novel Lucky Jim, which became the most
praiseworthy novel of 1950’s Britain. He was a visiting fellow
researcher in creative writing at Princeton University in the United
States and a visiting lecturer in other northeastern universities as
well. After serving for thirteen long years at the University of Wales
Swansea, he became a fellow of Peterhouse at Cambridge in 1961; though
he regretted the decision very soon and resigned in 1963.
Marriages & Personal Life
Kingsley had two marriages and was divorced twice. He married his
first wife Hilary Bardwell in 1948 but the two divorced soon after his
love affair with Elizabeth Jane Howard was discovered by Hilary in 1963.
However, the marriage broke
partly because of the earlier adultery activities on the part of
Kingsley, which he had admitted to many times. Kingsley fathered three
children from Hilary, among which was Martin Amis, who would follow his
father in his great career as a writer. After divorcing Hilary in 1965,
Kingsley married Jen the same year. Again the marriage proved to be
unsuccessful and they divorced in 1983. Kingsley did not remarry after
it and in his last years stayed in the same house where his first wife
Hilary lived with her third husband.
Notable Works
Kingsley’s literary works is known for its wide variety and reach to every genre- novels, scripts, short stories,
science and mystery. In his early career, he gained recognition as a
comedy novelist though the multiplicity of his work removed this tag
later and he became known as the master of every genre. Originally
inclined to be a poet, Kingsley wrote poetries which draw heavily for
their simple and accessible approach.
As a novelist, his first novel Lucky Jim may well be
termed as his most famous work in which was apparently a part of the
Angry Young Men movement in Britain. He wrote novels that were a
reflection of his own life and thoughts. Among his other popular works
was That Uncertain Feeling, which came in 1955, and I like It Here,
published in 1958’. ‘Take a girl like you’ which was published in 1960,
was his second best novel after Lucky Jim and gained him a huge
popularity as an author.
After 1960, Kingsley embarked on writing about science and mystery
fictions as well as the comedy ones. He later shifted from mystery to
horror genre and wrote a successful book The Green Man
in 1969. Before that he had written The Anti-Death Leagues, which was
based upon imaginary incidents and characters. An atheist, Kingsley
wrote poems and stories which showed his scornfulness towards God and
religious beliefs. Meanwhile, he produced several essays and social
criticism mainly for journalistic publication.
In the late 1960s, Amis became writing James Bond novels. In 1965, he wrote the James Bond Dossier
and for the first time it was attributed to him, before that, he had
been writing it under a pseudonym or a false name. In the same year, he
wrote The Book of Bond, which was also known as Every Man His Own 007. Towards the end of his career, he turned as an Anthologist and wrote a number of poems and essays.
Political & Religious Views
Kingsley was a communist all along his youth and a member of the
Communist Party of Britain but estranged himself communism in 1956, when
the USSR invaded Hungry. From that time on he became an anti-communist
and a conservative. Kingsley’s religious views can be summed up in his
one statement, in which he publicly declared that he is a non believer
of God and rather hates him. Widely disparage for his addiction to
drinking wine and boozing, Kingsley made many attempts to justify it as
an influence of the characters in his novels. However, he separated
drinking from writing and followed a disciplined routine of writing in
his personal life. Kingsley received the honorary title ‘Knight’ in
1990.
Death
Kingsley Amis suffered from a mild stroke in 1995 which worsened
his already ill health. After suffering for few months, he eventually
died on 22 October 1995 at a hospital in London.
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Timeline: | ||||
1922- Kingsley Amis was born on 16 April 1922.
1941- He enrolled into St. John’s College, Oxford in year 1941.
1942- He was admitted into army service.
1945- Kingsley returned to Oxford to complete his degree.
1946- Kingsley joined the Communist Party of Great Britain.
1948- Kingsley was appointed as lecturer at the University of Wales Swansea.
1961- He became a fellow of Peterhouse at Cambridge in 1961.
1963- He resigned from the position.
1948- He married his first wife Hilary Bardwell in 1948.
1955- His book ‘that Uncertain Feeling’ came in 1955.
1958- He wrote a book ‘I like It Here’, which was published in 1958’.
1965- He divorced Hilary Bardwell.
1965- Kingsley married Jane.
1965- He wrote the James Bond Dossier under his name.
1969- He wrote a successful book ‘The Green Man’ in 1969.
1983- He divorced his second wife Jane.
1995- Kingsley Amis died.
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