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Melvin Burgess |
His books are never easy; they deal with difficult subjects such as homelessness, hunting, witchcraft, sex, child abuse and drug addiction. His writing is powerful and his characters are drawn with sensitivity and power that makes them leap from the page and into life.
THE BASICS
Born: London, 1954
Jobs: Trainee Journalist, Casual Labourer, Dyer of Silk
Lives: Manchester
First Book: The Cry of the Wolf, 1990
THE BOOKS
Books published by Penguin include; Kite, Loving April, Bloodsong, Bloodtide, Junk, Cry of the Wolf and most recently, Sara's Face.
Melvin Burgess is best known as the author of Junk - one of the most acclaimed and controversial books for young people ever to have been written. Neither the fact that Melvin came to write Junk, nor its resulting success surprised those already familiar with his work. "This writer involves the reader (and) plays havoc with the emotions," observed Wendy Cooling long before the controversy over Junk began.
His debut novel The Cry of the Wolf had prompted author Robert Westall to say, "As the shocker of the seventies, I'd like to say hello to the shocker of the nineties...". The Cry of the Wolf was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal, as were Burgess’s later titles: An Angel For May, The Baby and Fly Pie and The Ghost Behind the Wall. Fly Pie, a thriller in which a group of street children get involved in a baby kidnap, provided a clear signpost to the road that Burgess was travelling; the road that would lead to Junk, Bloodtide and Lady: My Life as a Bitch. (Described by The Guardian as “...a book about a teenage girl who embarks on a rampant sexual odyssey on the eve of her GCSEs.”)
Melvin Burgess was brought up in Sussex and Berkshire. As a child, his reading included The Wind in the Willows and Gerald Durrell's animal stories. He went on to enjoy The Hobbit and Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast books. A generally unconfident student, he became interested in writing when he was twelve and an English teacher praised one of his stories - "it was about the first time I'd ever done anything that got an A. I was so pleased I never stopped." After leaving school, Melvin moved to Bristol where he worked on occasional jobs, mainly in the building industry, and was often unemployed. He started writing in his twenties and wrote on and off for the next fifteen years before The Cry of the Wolf was published. He moved to London in 1983 and began a small business marbling fabrics for the fashion industry. He now lives in Manchester and writes full-time.
WHAT HE SAYS...
"Even if the hope isn't there in (my books), the hope's in the reader after they come away thinking 'this is wrong.'"
"I don't think society is very fair, by and large. I think individuals are fair, and my experience of life is much more that it's individuals, rather than institutions, who help you along."
"Junk is set in the early and middle eighties... all the major events have happened, are happening and will no doubt continue to happen. This book isn't fact; it isn't even faction. But it's all true, every word."
"Growing up isn't always easy, whatever age you are."
“It’s a comic allegory about sex and life – and all the important, darker issues that some people can’t handle teenagers reading about.”
(Of Lady: My Life as a Bitch, his latest and perhaps most controversial novel.)
"A Dickens of the future."
Michael Rosen
"A writer of the highest quality with exceptional powers of insight."
Sunday Times
"A very skilled storyteller... this writer involves the reader, plays havoc with the emotions and is certainly not about easy endings."
Wendy Cooling, Books For Keeps
"A gem of a book, which moved me long after I'd put it down."
Books For Keeps on An Angel For May
"Eerie and atmospheric... a thought-provoking book."
Junior Education on An Angel For May
"The writing has a racy momentum which hurtles this gripping blend of violence, tenderness and humour towards its dark, scary conclusion."
Guardian on The Baby and Fly Pie
"Totally gripping and charged with intense emotion."
Mail on Sunday on The Baby and Fly Pie
"An intricate, moving tale, as good on character as on plot detail."
Observer on The Baby and Fly Pie
"Grim realism mingles with lyrical sensitivity in Burgess's nail-biting drama which deserves to be a classic."
TES on The Baby and Fly Pie
"A compelling adventure story and a tribute to the human spirit."
Times on The Baby and Fly Pie
"One of the most powerful books I've read."
Paula Danziger, Treasure Islands on The Baby and Fly Pie
"Occasionally a 'teenage novel' comes along which makes one reconsider the whole genre and its potential. Such a book is Melvin Burgess's Junk."
Robert Dunbar, Children's Books in Ireland
"Bold and cunningly structured - a real novel with an unpatronising tone... Junk offers no easy solutions, but, both in content and execution, it respects the intelligence of its readers, leaving them shaken, probably, but informed and ready to make their own judgements."
Guardian
"The most talked-about children's book for years."
Mail on Sunday on Junk
"Moving and provocative."
Observer on Junk
"One novel that will leave an indelible impression on all who read it."
Publishers Weekly on Junk
"Junk is guaranteed to shake you and make you realise how awful and brilliant life is."
Teenage Reviewer, Scotland on Sunday
"It is the real thing - a teenage novel for teenage readers."
The Scotsman on Junk
"Brilliantly and sensitively written, it encompasses the raw, savage and ecstatic world of the adolescent mind... a superbly crafted and important book."
TES on Junk
"An honest, authentic look at drug culture."
Time Out on Junk
"Beautifully written."
Times on Junk
"It looks violence and passion straight in the eye... not for the nervous."
Sunday Times on Tiger, Tiger
“Caring only happens when we understand things. Melvin Burgess takes time to explain the implications of Alzheimer’s in The Ghost Behind the Wall. He does it rather beautifully within the context of a novel about a boy, so bored, lonely and doubting of life that he retreats to the ventilation pipes in his block of flats.”
Lindsay Fraser, Glasgow Herald on The Ghost Behind the Wall
“Set a century or so hence, after the government has moved out of London, leaving the city to warring ganglords, this is a terrifying yet utterly compelling story of human cruelty, and our need for love.”
Lyn Gardner, Guardian, on Bloodtide
“This was the best book that I have ever read. After reading the first paragraph I couldn’t put it down. The never-ending twists and unexpected outcomes make this book an excellent read for all teenagers.”
Anna Short in Teen Titles on Bloodtide
“Never has a teenager’s novel raised so many questions about life and the restrictions society places upon us as this one.”
15-year-old guest reviewer in the Sunday Times on Lady: My Life as a Bitch
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 1991 for The Cry of the Wolf
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 1993 for An Angel For May
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 1994 for The Baby and Fly Pie
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 2000 for The Ghost Behind The Wall
Shortlisted for the Whitbread Award 1997 for Junk
The Carnegie Medal 1997 for Junk
The Guardian Fiction Prize 1997 for Junk
PLACE AND DATE OF BIRTH
London; 1954
FAVOURITE BOOK
The Wind in the Willows and The Hobbit
When did you start writing?
Melvin first started to write when he was twelve and an English teacher gave him an 'A' ('I was so pleased I never stopped...'). He left school at eighteen and trained as a journalist, but he hated it. He wrote his first book when he was twenty, and continued to write in his spare time until he became a full-time writer at thirty-five.
Where do you get your ideas?
For Junk, Melvin's publisher suggested he write a book about drugs. However, Melvin also drew from personal experience, as his own brother was a drug addict, as were other people he knew. A lot of the events that take place in the story were true.
When Melvin gets stuck with a story he does something relaxing, like taking a bath or having a doze; walking, he says 'is a bit too energetic for proper imagining, which often happens when I'm at my most lazy. You get good ideas in the bath'.
Can you give any tips to becoming a successful author?
Melvin thinks that books that tackle serious issues, such as Junk, should be entertaining, engrossing, educational and above all, honest.
What are your hobbies?
Melvin has some pets: two gigantic cockroaches, some snails in a jar, and a cat named Panky.
If you hadn't been a writer, what do you think you would have been?
Before he started to write full-time, Melvin had a business marbling fabrics for the fashion industry.
More about Melvin
Melvin was brought up in Sussex and Berkshire. After leaving school, Melvin moved to Bristol where he worked at occasional jobs, mainly in the building industry, and was often unemployed. He wrote his first book when he was twenty and wrote on and off for the next fifteen years before his novel The Cry of the Wolf was accepted for publication in 1990. It was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal. At about this time Melvin met the author Robert Westall who said to him, 'As the shocker of the seventies, I'd like to say hello to the shocker of the nineties...' Melvin thinks this is the nicest thing anyone has ever said to him about his books.
Melvin Burgess, described by Maureen Owen, writing in The Times, as 'a new and powerful talent', is now regarded as one of the rising stars of contemporary children's literature. His books are never easy; they deal with difficult subjects such as homelessness, hunting, witchcraft and child abuse. His writing is powerful and his characters are drawn with sensitivity and power that makes them leap from the page and into life. Jill Burridge writing of The Baby and Fly Pie in 'Books for Keeps' gives a real sense of his work: 'The tale is compulsive and its wry tone brings flashes of humour and occasional warmth. Gritty and realistic, this novel touches and challenges, and certainly can't be put down.' Three of his novels have been shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal. In 1997, Junk won the Carnegie Medal and the Guardian Fiction Award and was shortlisted for the Whitbread Award.
Melvin continues to write challenging novels for young adults as well as extraordinarily imaginative fiction for younger readers.

