Early life and education Farrell, born in
Liverpool, England, into a family of an Irish background, was the second of three brothers. His father, William Farrell, had worked as an accountant in
Bengal and, in 1929, he married Prudence Josephine Russell, a former receptionist and secretary to a doctor. From the age of 12, he attended
Rossall School in
Lancashire. After World War II, the Farrells moved to
Dublin, following which Farrell spent much time in Ireland. This, perhaps combined with the popularity of
Troubles, leads many to regard him as an Irish writer. After leaving Rossall, he taught in Dublin and also worked for some time on
Distant Early Warning Line in the Canadian Arctic. In 1956, he went to study at
Brasenose College, Oxford; while there he contracted
polio. This left him partially disabled and disease was prominent in his works. In 1960, he left Oxford with
third-class honours in French and Spanish and went to live in France, where he taught at a
lycée.
Early works Farrell published his first novel,
A Man From Elsewhere, in 1963. Set in France, it shows the clear influence of French
Existentialism. The story follows Sayer, a journalist for a communist paper, as he tries to find skeletons in Regan's closet. Regan is a dying novelist who is about to be awarded an important Catholic literary prize. The book mimics the fight between the two leaders of French existentialism:
Jean-Paul Sartre and
Albert Camus, Sayer representing Sartre and Regan as Camus. The two argue about existentialism: the position that murder can be vindicated as an expedient in overthrowing tyranny (Sartre) versus the stance that there are no ends that justify unjust means (Camus).
Bernard Bergonzi reviewed it in the
New Statesmans 20 September 1963 issue, writing: "Many first novels are excessively autobiographical, but
A Man from Elsewhere suffers from the opposite fault of being a cerebral construct, dreamed up out of literature and the contemporary French cinema."
Simon Raven wrote in
The Observer on 15 September 1963: "Mr. Farrell's style is spare, his plotting lucid and well timed; his expositions of moral or political problems are pungent if occasionally didactic." He won a
Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize for the novel, and with the prize money travelled to India to research his next novel.
Charles Sturridge scripted a film version of
Troubles made for British television in 1988 and directed by
Christopher Morahan.
Death In 1979, Farrell decided to quit London to live on the
Sheep's Head peninsula in
County Cork, Ireland. A few months later he drowned on the coast of
Bantry Bay after falling into the sea from rocks while angling. He was 44. "Had he not sadly died so young",
Salman Rushdie said in 2008, "there is no question that he would today be one of the really major novelists of the English language. The three novels that he did leave are all in their different way extraordinary." Farrell is buried in the churchyard of the
St James' Church, a
Church of Ireland parish church in
Durrus. The manuscript library at
Trinity College, Dublin, holds his papers:
Papers of James Gordon Farrell (1935–1979). TCD MSS 9128-60.
Legacy Peter Morey wrote that "an interpretation of the novels of J. G. Farrell and
Paul Scott as examples of
post-colonial fiction [is possible], since both partake of oppositional and interrogative narrative practices which recognize and work to dismantle the staple elements of imperial narrative." In the 1984 novel
Foreign Affairs by
Alison Lurie, Vinnie Miner, the protagonist, reads a Farrell novel on her flight from New York to London. In the 1991 novel
The Gates of Ivory by
Margaret Drabble, the writer Stephen Cox is modelled on Farrell. ==Quotes==