• ggm 9 minutes ago

    Always tempting to say the dehumanising influences of his childhood informed his writing but I think that's unfair to his own sensibility and idea of modern creative writing.

    He had a very eventful life. Across very eventful times.

    I think the short stories work better than most of the longform although "the wind from nowhere" and "empire of the sun are very good".

    I also think it's useful to remember he wasn't writing in a vacuum, British SF was exploring all kinds of forms, Michael Moorcock wrote deconstructed novels where chapter readings before flow text carried a whole emotional plane not exposed in the plot (the condition of muzak) and Brian Aldiss expored SF literary criticism taking the genre seriously for almost the first time. He was a writer in a context of exploratory writing.

    • ecliptik 5 hours ago

      One of my favorite authors and highly recommend his short stories [1] and the "ambiguous apocalypse" trilogy - The Drowned World, The Burning World, and The Crystal World.

      As one of collections intros said, Ballard is science fiction, but Inner Space, not Outer Space.

      1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Complete_Short_Stories_of_...

      • atombender 4 hours ago

        I absolutely loved The Crystal World. It's a unique, weird fever dream of a novel. I still find myself thinking about it at random times, even while being unsure if the book really makes sense.

        The Burning World is rarely talked about. How is it?

        • FpUser 4 hours ago

          >"The Drowned World, The Burning World, and The Crystal World" - same here, my favorites

        • pnw 4 hours ago

          It seems like the best authors - JG Ballard in this instance - are somehow resistant to modern biographers. Even the least worst Phillip K Dick biography (Divine Invasions) is over 30 years old!

          • antirez 5 hours ago

            Loved High rise, Concrete island, Empire of the sun. Also make sure to read this: https://www.jgballard.ca/uncollected_work/what_i_believe.htm...

            • Lio 4 hours ago

              I really enjoyed some of his later books too. Cocaine Nights and Super Cannes are great.

              Like a lot of his books they seem simple until you dig into them. They fry my brain a bit but that’s surrealism for you.

              Will Self has some good writing about Ballard.

              • Finnucane 37 minutes ago

                I was the editor who published Super Cannes in the US. It still makes my day to see it mentioned.

            • MaysonL 2 hours ago

              Note that the title is probably an allusion to Ray Bradbury’s collection “The Illustrated Man”.

              • dbcooper 5 hours ago

                "The 60 Minute Zoom" is a good short story to start with.

                • languagehacker 5 hours ago

                  I absolutely love JG Ballard. Crash is a classic, and High Rise is a fun one.

                  • nickdothutton 5 hours ago

                    A favourite of mine. Do please check the interviews with him on youtube. Some authors try to show you the far future, he tried to show us the next 15 minutes.

                    • andrehacker 4 hours ago

                      Am I the only one that misread the title and expected to see something about the reclusive Bellard ?

                      • myth2018 2 hours ago

                        No, you're not. Same here.

                      • fallinditch 5 hours ago

                        I thought I was broad-minded enough to read Crash - I wasn't. I did enjoy other Ballard books.

                        • hermitcrab 5 hours ago

                          'The Atrocity Exhibition' is even weirder. I didn't get it at all. Enjoyed most of his other work though.

                          • ghaff 2 hours ago

                            A lot of Ballard was pretty weird. I liked much of his work but "world-destroying" contemporaries like Wyndham were more approachable in general.