Current:Home > StocksTradeEdge-Author A.S. Byatt, who wrote the best-seller 'Possession,' dies at 87 -RiskWatch
TradeEdge-Author A.S. Byatt, who wrote the best-seller 'Possession,' dies at 87
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-08 06:39:54
LONDON — British author A.S. Byatt,TradeEdge who wove history, myth and a sharp eye for human foibles into books that included the Booker Prize-winning novel "Possession," has died at the age of 87.
Byatt's publisher, Chatto & Windus, said Friday that the author, whose full name was Antonia Byatt, died "peacefully at home surrounded by close family" on Thursday.
Byatt wrote two dozen books, starting with her first novel, "The Shadow of the Sun," in 1964. Her work was translated into 38 languages.
"Possession," published in 1990, follows two young academics investigating the lives of a pair of imaginary Victorian poets. The novel, a double romance which skillfully layers a modern story with mock-Victorian letters and poems, was a huge bestseller and won the prestigious Booker Prize.
Accepting the prize, Byatt said "Possession" was about the joy of reading.
"My book was written on a kind of high about the pleasures of reading," she said.
"Possession" was adapted into a 2002 film starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Aaron Eckhart. It was one of several Byatt books to get the film treatment. "Morpho Eugenia," a gothic Victorian novella included in the 1992 book "Angels and Insects," became a 1995 movie of the same name, starring Mark Rylance and Kristin Scott Thomas.
Her short story "The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye," which won the 1995 Aga Khan Prize for Fiction, inspired the 2022 fantasy film "Three Thousand Years of Longing." Directed by "Mad Max" filmmaker George Miller, it starred Idris Elba as a genie who spins tales for an academic played by Tilda Swinton.
Byatt's other books include four novels set in 1950s and '60s Britain that together are known as the Frederica Quartet: "The Virgin in the Garden," published in 1978, followed by "Still Life," "Babel Tower" and "A Whistling Woman." She also wrote the 2009 Booker Prize finalist "The Children's Book," a sweeping story of Edwardian England centered on a writer of fairy tales.
Her most recent book was "Medusa's Ankles," a volume of short stories published in 2021.
Byatt's literary agent, Zoe Waldie, said the author "held readers spellbound" with writing that was "multi-layered, endlessly varied and deeply intellectual, threaded through with myths and metaphysics."
Clara Farmer, Byatt's publisher at Chatto & Windus — part of Penguin Random House — said the author's books were "the most wonderful jewel-boxes of stories and ideas."
"We mourn her loss, but it's a comfort to know that her penetrating works will dazzle, shine and refract in the minds of readers for generations to come," Farmer said.
Born Antonia Susan Drabble in Sheffield, northern England, in 1936 – her sister is novelist Margaret Drabble – Byatt grew up in a Quaker family, attended Cambridge University and worked for a time as a university lecturer.
She married economist Ian Byatt in 1959 and they had a daughter and a son before divorcing. In 1972, her 11-year-old son, Charles, was struck and killed by a car while walking home from school.
Charles died shortly after Byatt had taken a teaching post at University College London to pay for his private school fees. After his death, she told The Guardian in 2009, she stayed in the job "as long as he had lived, which was 11 years." In 1983, she quit to become a full-time writer.
Byatt lived in London with her second husband, Peter Duffy, with whom she had two daughters.
Queen Elizabeth II made Byatt a dame, the female equivalent of a knight, in 1999 for services to literature, and in 2003 she was made a chevalier (knight) of France's Order of Arts and Letters.
In 2014, a species of iridescent beetle was named for her — Euhylaeogena byattae Hespenheide — in honor of her depiction of naturalists in "Morpho Eugenia."
veryGood! (71)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Oceans Are Melting Glaciers from Below Much Faster than Predicted, Study Finds
- Attacks on Brazil's schools — often by former students — spur a search for solutions
- Florida's abortion laws protect a pregnant person's life, but not for mental health
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- COVID during pregnancy may alter brain development in boys
- This Week in Clean Economy: Cost of Going Solar Is Dropping Fast, State Study Finds
- ‘A Death Spiral for Research’: Arctic Scientists Worried as Alaska Universities Face 40% Funding Cut
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- As pandemic emergencies end, some patients with long COVID feel 'swept under the rug'
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- When homelessness and mental illness overlap, is forced treatment compassionate?
- How Massachusetts v. EPA Forced the U.S. Government to Take On Climate Change
- Trump Admin. Halts Mountaintop Mining Health Risks Study by National Academies
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Mormon crickets plague parts of Nevada and Idaho: It just makes your skin crawl
- Today's election could weaken conservatives' long-held advantage in Wisconsin
- Gemini Shoppable Horoscope: 11 Birthday Gifts The Air Sign Will Love
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Teen with life-threatening depression finally found hope. Then insurance cut her off
Shootings on Juneteenth weekend leave at least 12 dead, more than 100 injured
Washington state stockpiles thousands of abortion pills
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
4 people found dead at home in Idaho; neighbor arrested
24-Hour Flash Deal: Save $225 on the Dyson Ball Animal 3 Extra Upright Vacuum
James Ray III, lawyer convicted of murdering girlfriend, dies while awaiting sentencing