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It was at King Edward’s that he found himself teaching [[Jonathan Coe]], later to become an award winning novelist. Coe has commented, ‘I believe I was about seventeen years old when I first read ''[[The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman]]''. For this I have to thank my English teacher, Garry Martin. He was always a good judge of other people’s taste and I could see the gleam of satisfaction in his eye as, describing to me this strange eighteenth-century novel full of black pages and narrative non sequiturs, he saw my own eyes light up.’<ref>5. Coe, Jonathan, ‘Laurence Sterne and B.S. Johnson’, in Marginal Notes, Doubtful Statements: Non-fiction, 1990-2013, [[Penguin Books]], UK, 2013</ref>
It was at King Edward’s that he found himself teaching [[Jonathan Coe]], later to become an award winning novelist. Coe has commented, ‘I believe I was about seventeen years old when I first read ''[[The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman]]''. For this I have to thank my English teacher, Garry Martin. He was always a good judge of other people’s taste and I could see the gleam of satisfaction in his eye as, describing to me this strange eighteenth-century novel full of black pages and narrative non sequiturs, he saw my own eyes light up.’<ref>5. Coe, Jonathan, ‘Laurence Sterne and B.S. Johnson’, in Marginal Notes, Doubtful Statements: Non-fiction, 1990-2013, [[Penguin Books]], UK, 2013</ref>


By the time ''To Weave a Rainbow'' was published (1986) he was running a bookshop as well as the restaurant while spending his free time writing.<ref>6. Browne, Howard, ‘Bookshelf’, Warwickshire and Worcestershire Life, September 1987, p68.</ref> This, his first novel was well received, ‘Garry Martin writes with a rare incisiveness, coupled with the ability to reflect the very ordinary happenings of day-to-day life with remarkably keen perception.’<ref>7. Browne, Howard, ‘Bookshelf’, Warwickshire and Worcestershire Life, September 1987, p68</ref>
By the time ''To Weave a Rainbow'' was published (1986) he was running a bookshop as well as the restaurant while spending his free time writing.<ref name="Browne">6. Browne, Howard, ‘Bookshelf’, Warwickshire and Worcestershire Life, September 1987, p68.</ref> This, his first novel was well received, ‘Garry Martin writes with a rare incisiveness, coupled with the ability to reflect the very ordinary happenings of day-to-day life with remarkably keen perception.’<ref name="Browne"/>


He then, having sold his two businesses, returned to full-time teaching/writing taking up a post at [[Cranleigh School]] as writer-in-residence. According to Mike Smith, '. . . these were turbulent times for him, not only because he was undergoing a divorce, but also because he had accepted a request from a friend to help in a mission to Kurdish Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the first Gulf War. He narrowly escaped capture whilst he was there, but managed to file dispatches for the [[BBC World Service]]<ref>8. Outlook, Barbara Myers (BBC World Service, 3 September 1991) [radio interview]. An interview on this subject was also given on, East is West, BBC Radio West Midlands, September 1991</ref> and to write ''A Sane Asylum'', a novel based on his journal of the trip.’<ref>9. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63</ref>
He then, having sold his two businesses, returned to full-time teaching/writing, taking up a post at [[Cranleigh School]] as writer-in-residence. According to Mike Smith, '. . . these were turbulent times for him, not only because he was undergoing a divorce, but also because he had accepted a request from a friend to help in a mission to Kurdish Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the first Gulf War. He narrowly escaped capture whilst he was there, but managed to file dispatches for the [[BBC World Service]]<ref>8. Outlook, Barbara Myers (BBC World Service, 3 September 1991) [radio interview]. An interview on this subject was also given on, East is West, BBC Radio West Midlands, September 1991</ref> and to write ''A Sane Asylum'', a novel based on his journal of the trip.’<ref>9. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63</ref>


On his return he moved to his final teaching post, at [[Nottingham High School]]. Here he focussed on Oxbridge entrance candidates and continued his writing. [[Robert Macfarlane (writer)|Robert Macfarlane]], a pupil at this time, has commented, ‘Every so often you meet a teacher who changes your life as the adverts say. Garry Martin was that person for me.’<ref>10. Robert Macfarlane (BBC Radio Nottingham, December 2003) [radio interview]. http://www.bbc.co.uk/nottingham/culture/2003/12/robert_macfarlane_first_book_award.shtml Accessed 25 November 2016</ref>
On his return he moved to his final teaching post, at [[Nottingham High School]]. Here he focussed on Oxbridge entrance candidates and continued his writing. [[Robert Macfarlane (writer)|Robert Macfarlane]], a pupil at this time, has commented, ‘Every so often you meet a teacher who changes your life as the adverts say. Garry Martin was that person for me.’<ref>10. Robert Macfarlane (BBC Radio Nottingham, December 2003) [radio interview]. http://www.bbc.co.uk/nottingham/culture/2003/12/robert_macfarlane_first_book_award.shtml Accessed 25 November 2016</ref>


A radio interview given in 2005 shows him as an active and engaged teacher working on directing an imaginative school performance of ''[[Look Back in Anger]]''.<ref>11. (BBC Radio Nottingham, 1 December 2005) [radio interview]</ref>
A radio interview given in 2005 shows him as a teacher working on directing a school performance of ''[[Look Back in Anger]]''.<ref>11. (BBC Radio Nottingham, 1 December 2005) [radio interview]</ref>


The High School gave Martin an extended spring break to allow him to visit India to research a book on avatars. ‘In fact, he returned with the germ of a story to be called ''The Boy Who Made God Smile''.’<ref>12. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63</ref>
The school gave Martin extended leave to allow him to visit India to research a book on avatars. ‘In fact, he returned with the germ of a story to be called ''The Boy Who Made God Smile''.’<ref>12. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63</ref>


Martin's ''Orcadian Trilogy'' was launched in the Orkney Library and Archive in Kirkwall in 2019.
The setting of each novel, whether in a city or a landscape, is so powerfully evoked as to function as a character within the work. Hence ‘Being There’ – a sense of place in the novels of G J Martin – was the subject of a presentation at the Derby Book Festival.<ref>June 5th 2018</ref> The description of the islands of Colonsay and Oronsay were seen to be as important to the themes of ‘Of Love and Gravity’ <ref>Colley Books 2018</ref> as the characters who inhabit them.


As a teacher Martin's former pupils include not only Jonathan Coe and Robert Macfarlane but also journalists [[Andrew Billen]], [[Mark Steyn]], [[Dave Haslam]].<ref>13. http://garrymartin.org.uk Accessed 25 November 2016.</ref> However teaching has never deflected him from his primary purpose, as is apparent from comments made recently to Alan Clifford: ‘I’ve always had a novel in progress,’<ref>14. Alan Clifford (BBC Radio Nottingham, 19 October 2016) [radio interview].</ref> and to Amanda Penman: ‘I was once asked why I write and I simply replied “because I’m a writer.”’<ref>15. Penman. Amanda, ‘Writer’s Passion Speaks Volumes’, Artsbeat, March 2016, p21</ref>
G.J.Martin's magnum opus, his [[‘Orcadian Trilogy’]] was launched in the Orkney Library and Archive in Kirkwall in June 2019. The result of ten years research and six years writing, the books imagine the adventures of the Dons of Westray, an improbable, hybrid race, made up of nervous, oppressed islanders and a ship's boat full of strangers cast aside at the furthest edge of a war. The stories span the years from the last days of the Spanish Armada to the end of the Scottish earls’ dominion over the northern isles. This was a time when the Thames froze over, the Hansa towns declined, the Spanish empire dissolved and the age of chivalry died. Led by a young Spanish lord, full of ideals and memories of honour, the Dons of Westray dare all; determined to survive.

As a teacher Martin has an astonishing array of talent as former pupils, not only Jonathan Coe and Robert Macfarlane but also journalists [[Andrew Billen]], [[Mark Steyn]], [[Dave Haslam]] and men of the media Mark Keen and Ian Hunter, among many others.<ref>13. http://garrymartin.org.uk Accessed 25 November 2016.</ref> However teaching has never deflected him from his primary purpose, as is apparent from comments made recently to Alan Clifford: ‘I’ve always had a novel in progress,’<ref>14. Alan Clifford (BBC Radio Nottingham, 19 October 2016) [radio interview].</ref> and to Amanda Penman: ‘I was once asked why I write and I simply replied “because I’m a writer.”’<ref>15. Penman. Amanda, ‘Writer’s Passion Speaks Volumes’, Artsbeat, March 2016, p21</ref>


==Novels and short stories==
==Novels and short stories==

Revision as of 15:54, 12 March 2024

Garry John Martin
Born (1948-03-17) 17 March 1948 (age 76)
NationalityBritish
Alma materEmmanuel College, Cambridge
OccupationNovelist
PartnerSue Lewis-Blake
Websitegarrymartin.org.uk

Garry John Martin (born 1948 in Burton upon Trent) is a British novelist. He attended the local grammar school and art college and went on to read English at Emmanuel College, Cambridge.

Biography

On graduation he was selected to take part in a BBC documentary charting the lives of graduates.[1][2] This was followed up a decade later in 1980 with a programme in which Martin discussed his novel To Weave a Rainbow, then under the working title Snake or Snapdragon.[3] By this time he had already worked in the City as a systems analyst and taken a year long trip halfway round the world by yacht (a journey he documented in a series of articles for Yachting and Boating Weekly) worked as a teacher at Brentwood School, Essex and at King Edward's School, Birmingham. At the time of the 1980 interview he was planning to open a restaurant, ‘Blythe’s’, in Coleshill.

In an interview given to the school magazine at King Edward's, Birmingham, Martin is asked, ‘Do you think of yourself as a teacher who writes or a writer who teaches?’ He replies, ‘A writer who teaches: I don’t think that the two are incompatible. If I’m actively involved in the craft of writing, what I learn is useful in my teaching.[4]

It was at King Edward’s that he found himself teaching Jonathan Coe, later to become an award winning novelist. Coe has commented, ‘I believe I was about seventeen years old when I first read The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. For this I have to thank my English teacher, Garry Martin. He was always a good judge of other people’s taste and I could see the gleam of satisfaction in his eye as, describing to me this strange eighteenth-century novel full of black pages and narrative non sequiturs, he saw my own eyes light up.’[5]

By the time To Weave a Rainbow was published (1986) he was running a bookshop as well as the restaurant while spending his free time writing.[6] This, his first novel was well received, ‘Garry Martin writes with a rare incisiveness, coupled with the ability to reflect the very ordinary happenings of day-to-day life with remarkably keen perception.’[6]

He then, having sold his two businesses, returned to full-time teaching/writing, taking up a post at Cranleigh School as writer-in-residence. According to Mike Smith, '. . . these were turbulent times for him, not only because he was undergoing a divorce, but also because he had accepted a request from a friend to help in a mission to Kurdish Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the first Gulf War. He narrowly escaped capture whilst he was there, but managed to file dispatches for the BBC World Service[7] and to write A Sane Asylum, a novel based on his journal of the trip.’[8]

On his return he moved to his final teaching post, at Nottingham High School. Here he focussed on Oxbridge entrance candidates and continued his writing. Robert Macfarlane, a pupil at this time, has commented, ‘Every so often you meet a teacher who changes your life as the adverts say. Garry Martin was that person for me.’[9]

A radio interview given in 2005 shows him as a teacher working on directing a school performance of Look Back in Anger.[10]

The school gave Martin extended leave to allow him to visit India to research a book on avatars. ‘In fact, he returned with the germ of a story to be called The Boy Who Made God Smile.’[11]

Martin's Orcadian Trilogy was launched in the Orkney Library and Archive in Kirkwall in 2019.

As a teacher Martin's former pupils include not only Jonathan Coe and Robert Macfarlane but also journalists Andrew Billen, Mark Steyn, Dave Haslam.[12] However teaching has never deflected him from his primary purpose, as is apparent from comments made recently to Alan Clifford: ‘I’ve always had a novel in progress,’[13] and to Amanda Penman: ‘I was once asked why I write and I simply replied “because I’m a writer.”’[14]

Novels and short stories

To Weave a Rainbow ISBN 0-947993-35-5

Like a Fat Gold Watch (Amazon Kindle)

Cling (Amazon Kindle)

Beneath Napoleon’s Hat volume 1: Eagles without a Cliff ISBN 978-0-9931892-4-1

Beneath Napoleon’s Hat volume 2: A Black Violet ISBN 978-0-9931892-5-8

Beneath Napoleon’s Hat volume 3: Sylvia Beach and the Melancholy Jesus ISBN 978-0-9931892-6-5

Patchwork ISBN 978-0-9931892-7-2

The Boy Who Made God Smile ISBN 978-0-9931892-9-6

A Sane Asylum ISBN 978-0-9955320-2-1

Of Love and Gravity ISBN 978-0-9955320-4-5

The Orcadian Trilogy ISBN 978-0-9955320-7-6

The Truants ISBN 978-1-9162715-2-4

Forthcoming publications

Spindrift

The Red Mountain

Song of the Mother

Plays

The Bar

Showing

Eating Seagull

Job with an Interpreter

Awards

The Boy Who Made God Smile, Writing East Midlands Mentoring Prize 2013.

References

  1. ^ 1. A Question of Degree-1.The Milk Round, Nigel Rees (BBC Radio 4, 21 September 1970) [radio interview]
  2. ^ 2. A Question of Degree-2.Excellent Prospects for the Right Applicant, Nigel Rees (BBC Radio 4, 22 September 1970) [radio interview]
  3. ^ 3. A Question of Degree-Retrospective, with Nigel Rees (BBC Radio 4, 21 September 1980) [radio interview]
  4. ^ 4. Chronicle, King Edward’s School, Birmingham, 1976-7, http://www.oldeds.kes.org.uk/download.php?file=TnpFPQ Accessed 25 November 2016
  5. ^ 5. Coe, Jonathan, ‘Laurence Sterne and B.S. Johnson’, in Marginal Notes, Doubtful Statements: Non-fiction, 1990-2013, Penguin Books, UK, 2013
  6. ^ a b 6. Browne, Howard, ‘Bookshelf’, Warwickshire and Worcestershire Life, September 1987, p68.
  7. ^ 8. Outlook, Barbara Myers (BBC World Service, 3 September 1991) [radio interview]. An interview on this subject was also given on, East is West, BBC Radio West Midlands, September 1991
  8. ^ 9. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63
  9. ^ 10. Robert Macfarlane (BBC Radio Nottingham, December 2003) [radio interview]. http://www.bbc.co.uk/nottingham/culture/2003/12/robert_macfarlane_first_book_award.shtml Accessed 25 November 2016
  10. ^ 11. (BBC Radio Nottingham, 1 December 2005) [radio interview]
  11. ^ 12. Smith, Mike, ‘A Literary Life Spiced with Adventure’, Derbyshire Life, February 2016, p63
  12. ^ 13. http://garrymartin.org.uk Accessed 25 November 2016.
  13. ^ 14. Alan Clifford (BBC Radio Nottingham, 19 October 2016) [radio interview].
  14. ^ 15. Penman. Amanda, ‘Writer’s Passion Speaks Volumes’, Artsbeat, March 2016, p21