Joyce Stewart is from Barbados. She has taught
English at a secondary level for 35 years; she currently teaches at
the University of the West Indies.John Wyndham Parkes Lucas
Benyon Harris, to use his full name, was born in a
village, then part of Warwickshire, on July 10 1903, the son of a
barrister. He lived first in Knowle and then in Edgbaston until his
parents seperated when he was eight years old. After that he moved
around the country with his mother and brother, the writer Vivian
Benyon Harris.After a private school education, John tried his hand
at several jobs including farming, the law, art and advertising. He
began writing science fiction stories, influenced by the work of H
G Wells, under the names John Benyon, John Benyon Harris and
Wyndham Parkes. He eventually found a niche for his work in
American magazines. In the mid 1930s he had his work published in
British magazines, particularly in Tales of Wonder, the first
British science fiction magazine published between 1937 and 1942,
and in book form. During the Second World War he joined the army
and worked as a censor. He also saw action with the Royal Signals
in France.It took him some time to return to writing after the war
but when he did he found great success with possibly his best known
work, The Day of the Triffids (1951) which describes the invasion
of Earth by strange plants. It was soon regarded a classic of the
science fiction genre and others followed, The Kraken Wakes in
1953, The Chrysalids in 1955 and of course The Midwich Cuckoos in
1957.In 1963, at the age of 60, he married Grace Wilson but died
six years later, on March 11 1969.
The following day The New York Times said in an obituary: "John
Wyndham did more than any other British writer since H G Wells to
make science fiction popular in this country." Critics ascribed his
success to the fact that his plots, however fantastic, were
characterised by inventiveness, clarity and a profound sympathy for
mankind in the nuclear age.
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