The Illuminated Man: an unconventional portrait of JG Ballard
6 hours ago
- #Science Fiction
- #Literary Analysis
- #Biography
- JG Ballard's childhood and early life, including his time in a Japanese POW camp and the death of his wife, heavily influenced his unique literary vision.
- Ballard resisted biographies, but unauthorised works like John Baxter's and Christopher Priest's 'The Illuminated Man' aim to cement his legacy, though he worked in the undervalued genre of science fiction.
- Ballard's fiction explores 'inner space' and features recurring themes like extreme environments, obsessiveness, and dystopian imagery, leading to the term 'Ballardian' entering common parlance.
- Despite near-mainstream success with 'Empire of the Sun', Ballard's work often faced controversy, as seen in the critical reactions to 'Crash', which was deemed repulsive by some.
- Priest's biography was cut short by his terminal cancer and completed by his partner Nina Allan, resulting in an unconventional, poignant book that blends Ballard's life with Priest's illness.