In Memoriam

J.G. Ballard, 1930-2009

By April 19, 2009No Comments

He was a genu­inely pro­voc­at­ive thinker and an immacu­late writer. His fic­tion and his crit­ic­al work are of equal interest. If you don’t know his books, well, Crash, The Atrocity Exhibition, and the non-fiction col­lec­tion A User’s Guide To The Millenium are all imme­di­ately essen­tial. Three of the fea­ture films adap­ted from his oeuvre—Steven Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun (1987), David Cronenberg’s Crash (1996), and Jonathan Weiss’s The Atrocity Exhibition (1999)—are as dif­fer­ent from each oth­er, it seems, asmi­ght be con­sidered pos­sible. Yet each film accur­ately reflects and refracts essen­tial por­tions of Ballard’s vis­ion. And each is an indi­vidu­al masterpiece.

Ballard, by all accounts an excep­tion­al, and excep­tion­ally good-humored, indi­vidu­al, died after a long bout with pro­state can­cer on Sunday morning. 

“Everywhere is infin­itely excit­ing, giv­en the trans­form­ing power of the imagination.”—J.G.B., in a 1980 inter­view with Alan Dorey and Joseph Nicholas. 

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  • bill says:

    I have struggled with his fic­tion – I’ve read maybe a half dozen of his books – but even while doing so I’ve had to acknow­ledge that there was and is abso­lutely no one else like him. If you want to read some­thing Ballard-ian, you pretty much have no choice but to read Ballard. And that is, of course, an excep­tion­ally rare qual­ity in an artist, espe­cially these days.
    I feel like I should read some­thing in hon­or of him in the next few days. Time to pull him out of the lib­rary and have a look, I think.

  • Ed Howard says:

    Wow, that’s really sad. I haven’t read as much of his fic­tion as I’d like but *Crash* (both nov­el and film) is bril­liant. Maybe it’s time for me to finally dive into that Phoebe Gloeckner-illustrated edi­tion of *The Atrocity Exhibition* that I’ve had for so long.

  • Not to men­tion that he inspired The Normal’s great “Warm Leatherette” (and Grace Jones’s almost-as-great cov­er ver­sion). He’ll be missed.

  • Dan says:

    This depressed the hell out of me when I heard it: I’d read most of his work and found it bril­liant. And I want to see a Olivier Assayas/Jeremy Irons “Super-Cannes”, goddamnit.

  • steve simels says:

    Interviewed him in con­junc­tion with the video release of “Empire of the Sun.” Lovely guy, and bril­liant, obviously.

  • DVA118 says:

    Bill, I’m sur­prised you’re not a fan, giv­en what I’ve seen of your tastes on your blog. A great mind and author. Anyone here ever see the film ver­sion of “Atrocity Exhibition”? Still want to pick that up at somepoint…

  • SALO says:

    Ballard, in my opin­ion, was the greatest British nov­el­ist and short story writer of the second half of the 20th cen­tury. His bril­liance, ima­gin­a­tion, humor, and vis­ion­ary insight will surely be missed.