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← Back to all issuesGranta 3: The End of the English Novel
Autumn 1980
Is it the end of the English novel? Has it grown predictable and unadventurous? Granta 3 collects work from writers and critics which points to the fact that our terms have grown inadequate: it is the end of the English novel; but it is also the beginning – quite possibly an extremely important beginning – of British fiction.
From this Issue
Fiction|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Introduction: The End of the English Novel
Bill Buford
‘The novel has always smacked of inadequacies.’
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
Midnight’s Children
Salman Rushdie
‘He resolved never again to kiss earth for any god or man.’
An extract from Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children.
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
Southern Birds
Desmond Hogan
‘She was like a nun who wanted her body for herself but being generous gave it freely.’
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
A Scream of Toys
Alan Sillitoe
‘Edie looked a long time at blue sky in a pool of water after rain before dipping her finger down for a taste.’
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
Alice fell
Emma Tennant
‘Agony belonged to night and would take advantage of the union, increase the whirligig of pain.’
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
Riddley Walker
Russell Hoban
‘Ther leader he wer a big black and red spottit dog he come forit a littl like he ben going to make a speach or some thing’.
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Invasion from Outsiders
Lorna Sage
‘It seems necessary to say at the outset that I find the English novel a problematic entity, difficult to be properly sensible about.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
The Uneasy Middleground of British Fiction
Chris Bigsby
‘The English novel has for far too long been regarded as a cosily provincial’.
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
An Irrelevant Parochialism
Frederick Bowers
‘What strikes an ex-patriate most about the contemporary British novel is its conformity, its traditional sameness, and its realistically rendered provincialism.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Taking Risks
James Gindin
‘Transatlantic literary critical lenses are no more immune from distortion than are any others.’
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Essays & Memoir|Granta 3
Where Do We Go from Here?
Christine Brooke-Rose
‘This consciousness that is to wrap the planet seems to me dangerously like the pollution that may stifle it.’
Fiction|Granta 3
Fiction|Granta 3
God, He Was Good
J. K. Klavans
‘What’ve I ever done in my whole life that wasn’t painful anyway?’
The Online Edition
In Conversation|The Online Edition
Salman Rushdie | Interview
Salman Rushdie & John Freeman
‘I'm not quite the same person as the ‘me’ about whom the book is written.’