Stan Barstow | |
Birth Name: | Stanley Barstow |
Birth Date: | 28 June 1928 |
Birth Place: | Horbury, West Riding of Yorkshire, England |
Death Place: | Baglan, Neath Port Talbot, West Glamorgan, Wales |
Occupation: | Novelist, playwright and scriptwriter |
Education: | Ossett Grammar School Open University |
Movement: | Social realism |
Partner: | Diana Griffiths (1990–2011) |
Children: | 2 |
Stanley Barstow FRSL (28 June 1928 - 1 August 2011)[1] was an English novelist.[2]
Barstow was born in Horbury, near Wakefield in the West Riding of Yorkshire. His father was a coal miner and he attended Ossett Grammar School. He worked as a draughtsman and salesman for an engineering company.[3] He was best known for his 1960 novel A Kind of Loving, which has been turned into a film, a television series, a radio play and a stage play. The author's other novels included Ask Me Tomorrow (1962), The Watchers on the Shore (1966) and The Right True End (1976). He frequently attended public events in Ossett, where he grew up, and Horbury, his birthplace.
Barstow's other works included Joby, which was turned into a television play starring Patrick Stewart, A Raging Calm, A Season with Eros, A Brother’s Tale, Just You Wait and See, Modern Delights and an autobiography, In My Own Good Time (2001). He also wrote plays and short stories.
Barstow married Connie Kershaw in 1951 with whom he had two children, Neil and Gillian. In the late 1980s, he met Diana Griffiths who was beginning to learn her trade as a writer with Barstow's help.[4] He and Connie Kershaw separated in 1990, though never divorced. Stan started a new life with Griffiths, now a writer in her own right, with eight original plays and nearly twenty dramatisations to her credit. Later he lived in Pontardawe, South Wales, with her.[5] Stan Barstow died on 1 August 2011, aged 83.
The Stan Barstow Memorial Garden in Horbury is named after him. [6]
Novels
Short Story Collections
Plays
Autobiography