Philip pullman biography facts
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Philip Pullman
English author (born )
Sir Philip Nicholas Outram Pullman[1]CBE FRSL (born 19 October ) is an English writer. His books include the fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials and The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ, a fictionalised biography of Jesus. In , The Times named Pullman one of the "50 greatest British writers since ".[2] In a BBC poll, he was named the eleventh most influential individ in British culture.[3][4] He was knighted in the New Year Honours for services to literature.[5]
Northern Lights, the first volume in His Dark Materials, won the Carnegie Medal of the Library Association as the year's outstanding English-language children's book.[6] For the Carnegie's 70th anniversary, it was named in the top ten by a panel tasked with compiling a shortlist for a public vote for an all-time favourite.[7] It won that public vote and was named all-time "Carnegie of Carnegie
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Philip Pullman Biography
Philip Pullman British novelist and playwright, b.
With the publication of The Ruby in the Smoke in England in ( in the United States), Philip Pullman, a former schoolteacher raised in Rhodesia, Australia, London, and Wales, launched his career as a writer of young adult novels. Set in London during the Victorian era, the novel relates the adventures of Sally Lockhart, an inventive, courageous sixteen-year-old who finds herself caught in dangerous intrigue when she delves into the circumstances surrounding the death of the man she believed was her father.
The setting is effectively realized in the engrossing tale, which begins a trilogy that continues with The Shadow in the North (), published in Great Britain in as The Shadow in the Plate, and The Tiger in the Well (). Sally’s character develops as she grows older, falls in love, and becomes an unwed mother who runs her own financial consulting business. Over and over she displays her r
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Heat and Dust
This interview is chiefly concerned with the trilogy His Dark Materials. Inevitably, it gives away some important turns of the plot.
A lot of people known as children’s writers seem to have had irregular or disturbed childhoods. Was that the case with you?
Well, my father, who was an RAF officer, died when I was seven, during the Mau Mau rising in Kenya – we were told he was killed in combat, but I’ve never really got to the bottom of what happened – and for a while then my brother and I lived with my mother’s parents in Norfolk. And then she married again and with my stepfather (who was also an RAF officer) we went to Australia for a couple of years, and then to Wales. And then I grew up and went to university.
What were the values that were instilled into you?
The conventional middle-class ones of the time. My grandfather was a clergyman and so every Sunday I went to Sunday school and church. I was confirmed, I was a member of the choir, all that sor