Swollen Summer
Constant struggle against slow inevitable force of growth and decay, madness, etc. Post term pregnancy heatwave reading
Author
15 November 1930–19 April 2009
Also known as James Graham Ballard, James G. Ballard, J G Ballard, James G. BALLARD, JAMES GRAHAM BALLARD
James Graham Ballard was born and raised in the International Settlement in Shanghai, China to a chemist. In 1943 the Japanese occupied the International Settlement and Ballard's family was sent to the Lunghua Civilian Assembly Center, where they were interned for two years until the end of World War II. In 1946, Ballard went to England with his mother and sister, and stayed on in England after his mother and sister returned to China to rejoin his father. In 1949 he went to King's College, Cambridge to study medicine, but he began writing fiction and abandoned medicine in 1952 to pursue writing. In 1953 he joined the Air Force and was sent to the Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan to train. There he discovered science fiction in and he began to write science fiction. He left the RAF in 1954 and returned to England. In 1956 he published his science fiction story. In 1960 he committed to writing full-time.
202 works
Recorded as 1994; date may be inaccurate
28 editions
Recorded as 2002; date may be inaccurate
25 editions
Recorded as 2008; date may be inaccurate
23 editions
21 editions
Recorded as 1994; date may be inaccurate
15 editions
13 editions
22 editions
Recorded as 1990; date may be inaccurate
11 editions
10 editions
10 editions
9 editions
Recorded as 1984; date may be inaccurate
8 editions
8 editions
Recorded as 2001; date may be inaccurate
8 editions
7 editions
6 editions
6 editions
6 editions
6 editions
11 editions
Recorded as 2001; date may be inaccurate
11 editions
5 editions
5 editions
5 editions
Readers in conversation
Public notes, reviews, lists, and conversations around J. G. Ballard.
Constant struggle against slow inevitable force of growth and decay, madness, etc. Post term pregnancy heatwave reading
I read Crash hoping, as I’d heard, that it might present a psychological hazard to me as an automobile owner. Unfortunately, my squishy-looking car and all the other twenty-first century eyesores failed to arouse me to cream my fellow motorists as I might hav…
Books I own that have crumbling covers, yellowed paper, and speculative subject matter.
Ballard's pummelling hyper-fetishistic recombinations of the vocabularies of the human body (fluids, orifices, yielding or resisting flesh) and the automobile (steering columns, speedometers, manifold configurations of plastic and metal) induce a trance-state…
The marriage of reason and nightmare that has dominated the 20th century has given birth to an ever more ambiguous world. Across the communications landscape move the spectres of sinister technologies and the dreams that money can buy. Thermo-nuclear weapons…