Muriel Spark

-
Standard Name: Spark, Muriel
Birth Name: Muriel Sarah Camberg
Nickname: Sparklet
Married Name: Muriel Sarah Spark
Pseudonym: Aquarius
The publishing career of MS spanned the later twentieth century, extending beyond each end of that fifty-year period. She began writing as a poet, and went on to short fiction, literary criticism, biography, journalism, and drama. Having come to prose fiction through narrative poetry, she only gradually came to take the novel genre seriously.
Spark, Muriel. Curriculum Vitae: Autobiography. Constable.
197
She is, however, best known for her twenty-three novels, and especially for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, 1961. She experimented with the longer novel, but her critical and commercial success came with shorter works. She said she preferred minor novels, in which she could explore precisely defined subjects within clear formal boundaries.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Literary responses Hilary Mantel
Lindsay Duguid in the Times Literary Supplementlocated Fludd in the tradition of Muriel Spark and called it [s]erious without being pious, satirical without being trivial, and always forgiving . . . . both funny...
Intertextuality and Influence Hilary Mantel
At her selective convent school school Carmel McBain is thrown closely together with Karina (child of East European immigrant parents), because they are the only two children at the school from poor homes beyond its...
Textual Features Doris Lessing
Her topics range from cats to Sufism and censorship and from Jane Austen and Virginia Woolf to Anna Kavan and Muriel Spark .
Textual Production Jackie Kay
JK was one of twenty Scottish authors invited to contribute a monologue to a collaborative work entitled Dear Scotland, which was first performed by the Scottish National Theatre on 24 April 2014 as a...
Author summary Elizabeth Jolley
EJ , writing in the later twentieth century, was called the most comical and disturbing writer working in Australia today.
Bird, Delys, and Brenda Walker, editors. Elizabeth Jolley: New Critical Essays. Angus and Robertson.
back-cover
The author of some fifteen novels as well as plays, poetry, and short stories...
Textual Features Elizabeth Jolley
Mr. Scobie's Riddle is a black comedy set in a nursing home: one of EJ 's only two novels to have a male narrator-protagonist. Its ironically humorous tone salvages a story whose dark topic had...
Textual Features Germaine Greer
Friends, Associates Graham Greene
Personal friends who were Catholics or converted to that faith during the course of their friendships with Greene included Muriel Spark , Antonia White and the future writer Mary Wesley .
Occupation Rumer Godden
While living in Highgate RG took to organizing readings: at Foyles bookshop, promoting young poets; at Kenwood House; and for the Arts Council , where she spent two years on the Poetry Panel...
Reception Rumer Godden
She was awarded an OBE in 1993 (at the same time that Muriel Spark was made a Dame).
Chisholm, Anne. Rumer Godden, A Storyteller’s Life. Pan Books.
291
In 2010 a book of critical essays on RG appeared, edited by Lucy Le-Guilcher and Phyllis B. Lassner
Reception Carol Ann Duffy
The year following her Selected Poems, CAD won the Lannan Literary Award in the USA, and her work was included in the second volume of Penguin Modern Poets. A decade after that,...
Leisure and Society Ivy Compton-Burnett
ICB was scathing about the work of some younger novelists, like Iris Murdoch and Muriel Spark (though she took Murdoch more seriously than Spark).
Liddell, Robert, and Francis King. Elizabeth and Ivy. Peter Owen.
86, 93-4
In her years alone she became very fond of...
Travel Christine Brooke-Rose
In summer 1959 she and her husband were in Ferlach in southern Austria, on a lake near the border with Yugoslavia, in order to have cheap and uninterrupted working time. In the evenings...
Literary responses Christine Brooke-Rose
The book was not well received, because of what was felt to be its misanthropic spleen.
Birch, Sarah. Christine Brooke-Rose and Contemporary Fiction. Clarendon Press.
42
It was roughly treated, for instance, on a tv discussion programme. CBR remained dissatisfied with her first...
Material Conditions of Writing Christine Brooke-Rose
The revision of this novel was done partly at the home of Muriel Spark and Penelope Jardine in Tuscany. Spark, who had just met Brooke-Rose again after years out of touch, helped her search...

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

Spark, Muriel. Robinson. Macmillan, 1958.
Spark, Muriel. Robinson. Penguin, 1964.
Spark, Muriel. Symposium. Constable, 1990.
Spark, Muriel. Territorial Rights. Macmillan, 1979.
Spark, Muriel. The Abbess of Crewe. Macmillan, 1974.
Spark, Muriel. The Bachelors. Macmillan, 1960.
Spark, Muriel. The Ballad of Peckham Rye. Macmillan, 1960.
Spark, Muriel. The Ballad of Peckham Rye. Macmillan, 1965.
Spark, Muriel, editor. The Brontë Letters. Nevill, 1954.
Spark, Muriel. The Comforters. Macmillan, 1957.
Spark, Muriel. The Driver’s Seat. Macmillan, 1970.
Spark, Muriel. The Fanfarlo and Other Verse. Hand and Flower Press, 1952.
Spark, Muriel. The French Window. Macmillan, 1970.
Spark, Muriel. The Girls of Slender Means. Macmillan, 1963.
Spark, Muriel. The Go-Away Bird with Other Stories. Macmillan, 1958.
Spark, Muriel. The Hothouse by the East River. Macmillan, 1973.
Spark, Muriel. The Hothouse by the East River. Penguin, 1975.
Spark, Muriel. The Mandelbaum Gate. Macmillan, 1965.
Spark, Muriel. The Only Problem. First Edition Society, Franklin Library, 1984.
Spark, Muriel. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Macmillan, 1961.
Spark, Muriel. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. J. B. Lippincott, 1962.
Spark, Muriel. The Public Image. Macmillan, 1968.
Spark, Muriel. “The Seraph and the Zambesi”. The Observer Prize Stories: The Seraph and the Zambesi, and Twenty Others, Observer, 1952, pp. 1-12.
Spark, Muriel. The Stories of Muriel Spark. Dutton, 1985.
Spark, Muriel. The Takeover. Macmillan, 1976.