What to Read First: A Reader's Guide to Unfamiliar Literature
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A Good Place To Start

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Possession 5
Little Black Book of Stories 1

A Bad Place To Start

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The Biographer's Tale 1

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A.S. Byatt

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Please consider recommending where to begin reading this author, or where not to. A few words about your experiences reading this author and why you make the recommendations you do will be helpful to other users. If you are the author or have studied this author extensively, please say so.

paperhead January 27th, 2006 01:38 PM PST

Like so many others, I read and loved "Possession" (though I must admit I skimmed through some of the poetry pretty quickly). I then read "The Virgin in the Garden," with respect but with less enthusiasm. I'd certainly suggest trying "Possession" for starters.

jaime January 30th, 2006 11:57 AM PST

Byatt has several wonderful books of short stories, which you may sample to decide if you like her writing. "The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye" is especially engaging.

The following Byatt novels are a series, so you may not want to start there: "The Virgin in the Garden," "Still Life," "Babel Tower," and "A Whistling Woman."

Biography

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British Council Arts

From: contemporarywriters.com

Biography

Dame A(ntonia) S(usan) Byatt was born on 24 August 1936 in Yorkshire. She was educated at a Quaker school in York and at Newnham College, Cambridge, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, and Somerville College, Oxford, where she studied as a postgraduate. She taught in the Extra-Mural Department of London University and the Central School of Art and Design, and in 1972 became full-time Lecturer in English and American Literature at University College, London (Senior Lecturer, 1981). She left in 1983 to concentrate on writing full-time. She has travelled widely overseas to lecture and talk about her work, often with the British Council, and was Chairman of the Society of Authors between 1986 and 1988. She was a member of the Literature Advisory Panel for the British Council between 1990 and 1998. She has served on the judging panels for a number of literary prizes, including the Booker Prize for Fiction, and is recognised as a distinguished critic, contributing regularly to journals and newspapers including the Times Literary Supplement, The Independent and the Sunday Times, as well as to BBC radio and television programmes. She was also a member of the Kingman Commitee on the Teaching of English Language (1987-8).

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