The Biographer’s Tale

 

                       
The Biographer’s Tale

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Title
The Biographer’s Tale
Author A. S. Byatt
Genre British literature, Literary fiction, Metafiction, Philosophical fiction
Format N/A

 

Book Description

The Biographer’s Tale follows a disenchanted postgraduate student who abandons literary theory to write a biography—only to find that his subject dissolves into fragments and competing narratives. As he traces three seemingly unrelated strands of his subject’s life, the novel becomes a meditation on truth, knowledge, and the limits of biography itself. Witty and intellectually playful, it reflects Byatt’s fascination with scholarship, storytelling, and the elusive nature of lives reconstructed through texts.

 

About Author

A. S. Byatt (1936–2023), born Antonia Susan Drabble, was an acclaimed British novelist, short-story writer, and literary critic. Educated at the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford, she taught literature for many years while developing a body of fiction celebrated for its intellectual depth and stylistic range. Byatt achieved wide recognition with Possession: A Romance (1990), which won the Booker Prize and became her best-known work. Her writing often blends narrative with philosophy, myth, science, and art history, reflecting her belief in the pleasures of serious reading. She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 1999 for services to literature.

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/