Book description
Dean Jocelin has a vision: that God has chosen him to erect a great
spire on his cathedral. His mason anxiously advises against it, for
the old cathedral was built without foundations. Nevertheless, the
spire rises octagon upon octagon, pinnacle by pinnacle, until the
stone pillars shriek and the ground beneath it swims. Its shadow
falls ever darker on the world below, and on Dean Jocelin in particular.
From the author of Lord of the Flies, The Spire is a
dark and powerful portrait of one man's will, and the folly that he creates.
'A superb tragedy . . . the book should become a classic.'
Sunday Telegraph
'A marvel.' Frank Kermode, New York Review of Books
William Golding was born in Cornwall in 1911 and was educated at
Marlborough Grammar School and at Brasenose College, Oxford. Before he
became a schoolmaster he was an actor, a lecturer, a small-boat sailor
and a musician. A now rare volume, Poems, appeared in 1934. In
1940 he joined the Royal Navy and saw action against battleships,
submarines and aircraft. He was present at the sinking of the
Bismarck. He finished the war as a Lieutenant in command of a rocket
ship, which was off the French coast for the D-Day invasion, and later
at the island of Welcheren. After the war he returned to Bishop
Wordsworth's School in Salisbury and was there when his first novel,
Lord of the Flies, was published in 1954. He gave up teaching
in 1961. Lord of the Flies was filmed by Peter Brook in 1963.
Golding listed his hobbies as music, chess, sailing, archaeology and
classical Greek (which he taught himself). Many of these subjects
appear in his essay collections The Hot Gates and A Moving
Target. He won the Booker Prize for his novel Rites of
Passage in 1980, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1983. He was knighted in 1988. He died at his home in the summer of
1993. The Double Tongue, a novel left in draft at his death,
was published in June 1995.