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John Christopher

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Occupation
  
Writer

Name
  
John Christopher

Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Writer

Alma mater
  
Peter Symonds College

Education
  
Peter Symonds College

Genre
  
Science fiction


John Christopher lookingglassreviewcomassetsimagesJohnChristop

Born
  
Sam Youd 16 April 1922 Huyton, Lancashire, England, UK (
1922-04-16
)

Pen name
  
Christopher Samuel Youd (professional nonfiction), John Christopher (science fiction), and several others

Notable works
  
The Tripods The Guardians

Died
  
February 3, 2012, Bath, United Kingdom

Awards
  
Guardian Children's Fiction Prize

Nominations
  
Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Edgar Award for Best Short Story, Nebula Award for Best Short Story

Books
  
The White Mountains, The Death of Grass, The City of Gold and Lead, The Pool of Fire, The Guardians

Similar People
  
Hans‑Georg Noack, Nicholas Christopher, Cornel Wilde, Arif Mardin, JJ Cale

John Williams at Ronnie Scott's - Documentary of 1971


Sam Youd (16 April 1922 – 3 February 2012), known professionally as Christopher Samuel Youd, was a British writer, best known for science fiction under the pseudonym John Christopher, including the novels The Death of Grass, The Possessors, and the young-adult novel series The Tripods. He won the Guardian Prize in 1971 and the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis in 1976.

Contents

John Christopher Tag John Christopher Niel Bushnell Author Artist

Youd also wrote under variations of his own name and under the pseudonyms Stanley Winchester, Hilary Ford, William Godfrey, William Vine, Peter Graaf, Peter Nichols, and Anthony Rye.

John Christopher The Tripods Trilogy by John Christopher The Big Bad Book Blog

Holding on john christopher way


Biography

John Christopher John Christopher obituary Books The Guardian

Sam Youd was born in Huyton, Lancashire (though Youd is an old Cheshire surname). He adopted the name Christopher Samuel Youd for his professional writings, leading to the widespread but mistaken belief that that was his birth name. Throughout his life he was known simply as Sam to his friends and acquaintances.

John Christopher John Christopher obituary Books The Guardian

Youd was educated at Peter Symonds' School in Winchester, Hampshire, then served in the Royal Corps of Signals from 1941 to 1946. A scholarship from the Rockefeller Foundation made it possible for him to pursue a writing career, beginning with The Winter Swan (Dennis Dobson, 1949), published under the name Christopher Youd. He wrote science fiction short stories as John Christopher from 1951 and his first book under that name was a science fiction novel, Year of the Comet, published by Michael Joseph in 1955. John Christopher's second novel, The Death of Grass (Michael Joseph, 1956) was Youd's first major success as a writer. It was published in the United States the following year as No Blade of Grass (Simon & Schuster, 1957). An American magazine published Year of the Comet later that year and it was issued in 1959 as an Avon paperback entitled Planet in Peril. Youd continued to use the pen name John Christopher for the majority of his writing and all of his science fiction . The Death of Grass has been reissued many times, most recently in the Penguin Modern Classics (2009).

John Christopher Samuel Youd aka John Christopher dies aged 89 Books The Guardian

In 1966 Youd started writing science fiction for adolescents, using the name John Christopher in every case. The Tripods trilogy (1967–68), The Lotus Caves (1969), The Guardians (1970) and the Sword of the Spirits trilogy (1971–72) were all well received. He won the annual Guardian Children's Fiction Prize for The Guardians. In 1976 he won the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis, youth fiction category, for the same novel in its German translation, Die Wächter.

In 1946 he married Joyce Fairbairn, with whom he had five children, Nick, Rose, Liz, Sheila and Margret. After he and Joyce divorced in 1978, he married Jessica Ball.

Youd lived for many years in Rye, East Sussex but died in Bath, Somerset, on 3 February 2012 of complications from bladder cancer.

Film and television adaptations

The Death of Grass was adapted as a film by Cornel Wilde under its American title, No Blade of Grass (1970).

The Tripods was partially developed into a British TV series. In 2012 it was reported to be in development as a film.

Empty World was developed into a 1987 TV movie in Germany, Leere Welt. The Guardians was made into a 1986 TV series in Germany, Die Wächter.

The Lotus Caves was in development in 2007 as a film from Walden Media, to have been directed by Rpin Suwannath. Later, in 2013, a TV pilot based loosely on The Lotus Caves was developed by Bryan Fuller and titled High Moon. The pilot did not get picked up as a series, but was released on SyFy and Netflix in 2014.

Short stories

Youd's first published story was "Dreamer" in the March 1941 Weird Tales, as C.S. Youd. He has had stories published in the magazines Astounding Science Fiction, Science Fantasy, Worlds Beyond Science-Fantasy Fiction, New Worlds, Galaxy Science Fiction, SF Digest, Future Science Fiction, Space SF Digest, Thrilling Wonder Stories, Authentic Science Fiction, Space Science Fiction, Nebula Science Fiction, Fantastic Universe, Saturn Science Fiction, Orbit Science Fiction, Fantastic Story Magazine, If: Worlds of Science Fiction, Worlds of Science Fiction (UK), Argosy (UK), The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Beyond Infinity

Serializations

No Blade of Grass was serialized in The Saturday Evening Post in 1957. Caves of Night was serialized in John Bull Magazine in 1958.

Anthologies

  • The Best SF Stories 3rd Series by Grayson & Grayson (1953)
  • Avon Science fiction and Fantasy Reader #1 (1953)
  • The Twenty-Second Century Grayson & Grayson (1954)
  • Gateway To Tomorrow edited by John Carnell, published by Panther (1963)
  • Avon Science Fiction and Fantasy Reader No. 2
  • The Best Science Fiction Stories Third Series edited by Everett F. Bleiler and T. E. Dikty
  • The Tenth Pan Book of Horror Stories, edited by Herbert Van Thal (1969)
  • Young Winter’s Tales No. 2, ed. M. R. Hodgkin, London: Macmillan (1971)
  • In Time to Come, Topliner (1973)
  • The Best of British SF 1 Orbit Books (1977)
  • The Random House Book of Science Fiction Stories Random House (1997) (ISBN 0-679-88527-7)
  • The Young Oxford Book of Nasty Endings, (1997), edited by Dennis Pepper, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-278151-0
  • References

    John Christopher Wikipedia


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