Novelist Muriel Spark Dead At 88
Books Made Her One Of The Most Admired British Writers Of Postwar Years
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Author Dame Muriel Spark in 1985. Spark, whose spare and humorous novels made her one of the most admired British writers of the post World War II years, died in Tuscany, Italian officials said Saturday April 15, 2006. She was 88. (AP Photo)
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Most of Spark's novels are short and spare, with the plots often bizarre or macabre, satirical or blackly humorous.
In 1970's "The Driver's Seat," the main character searches for someone to murder her.
And "The Abbess of Crewe" a 1974 satire written after Watergate, is about the political machinations in an ecclesiastical community.
Spark had a very individual way of writing. She wrote longhand, with little if any revision, straight into spiral-bound notebooks she got from a stationer in Edinburgh. She would never use a pen anyone else had touched.
She was made a dame in 1993, the female equivalent of a knight. In 1963, she became a fellow of The Royal Society of Literature, and in 1978 an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
She received the David Cohen Literature Prize for lifetime achievement in 1997.
Among Spark's poetic works are 1952's "The Fanfarlo and Other Verse" and 1982's "Going up to Sotheby's and other poems."
Some of her best-known novels are 1959's "Memento Mori," 1960's "The Ballad of Peckham Rye," 1975's "The Mandelbaum Gate," which won Britain's James Tait Black Memorial Prize, 1981's "Loitering with Intent" and 1988's "A Far Cry from Kensington."
Spark is survived by her son, Robin.
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