A. L. Barker
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Audrey Lilian Barker (April 13, 1918 - February 21, 2002) was an English novelist and short story writer. She was born in St Pauls Cray, Kent and brought up in Beckenham.[1] During her lifetime, she published ten collections of short stories and eleven novels, one of which - John Brown's Body - was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1970. She was also the winner of the inaugural Somerset Maugham Prize in 1947, with her collection of short stories called Innocents.
Contents |
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Novels
- Apology for a Hero (1950)
- A Case Examined (1965)
- The Middling (1967)
- John Brown's Body (1970)
- Source of Embarrassment (1974)
- Heavy Feather (1978)
- Relative Successes (1984)
- The Gooseboy (1987)
- The Woman Who Talked to Herself (1989)
- Zeph (1992)
- The Haunt (1999)
[edit] Short Story Collections
- Innocents (1947)
- Novelette, with Other Stories (1951)
- The Joy-Ride and After (1963)
- Lost Upon the Roundabouts (1964)
- Femina Real (1971)
- Life Stories (1981)
- No World of Love (1985)
- Any Excuse for a Party (1991)
- Element of Doubt (1992)
- Seduction (1994)
- Submerged (2002)

