Alan Garner (born CongletonOctober 17, 1934) is an English writer whose work is firmly rooted in his local Cheshire. His very early writing was marketed mainly for children and could be described as fantasy, though he himself rejects the label of "children's writer":
I do not write for children, but for myself. Adolescents read my books. By adolescence, I mean an arbitrary age somewhere between 10 and 18. This group of people is the most important of all.
His more recent work (Strandloper, Thursbitch) is more specifically intended for adult readers, while the earlier The Stone Book Quartet (which received the Phoenix Award in 1996) is poetic in style and inspiration. Garner pays particular attention to language, and strives to render the cadence of the Cheshire tongue in modern English. This he explains by the sense of anger he felt on reading "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight": the footnotes would not have been needed by his father. This and other aspects of his writing are the subject of Neil Philip's A Fine Anger, (Collins, 1981), which offers a detailed analysis of his work.
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Alan Garner - Provides biography, bibliography, criticism, and links to other sites about the British writer.
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Interview with Alan Garner - From Raymond H. Thompson's Interviews with Authors of Modern Arthurian Literature
to her bed after collapsing on Christmas Day, sixteen year old Mull (Nadine Garner) finds herself in charge of a muddled ...