B. S. Johnson


Bryan Stanley Johnson was an English experimental novelist, poet and literary critic. He also produced television programmes and made films.

Early life

Born into a working-class family, Johnson was evacuated from London twice during World War Two. He was sent to a secondary modern school in High Wycombe. However, he managed to transfer to Kingston Day Commercial School, where "they taught me shorthand, typing, and bookkeeping. Useful." He left school at 16 to work variously as an accounting clerk, a bank junior, and a clerk at Standard Oil, but taught himself Latin in the evenings, attended a year's pre-university course at Birkbeck College, and with this preparation, managed to pass the university entrance exam for King's College London.

Career

After he graduated with a 2:2, Johnson wrote a series of increasingly experimental and often acutely personal novels that would now be considered visual writing. In his early years he collaborated on several projects with a close friend and fellow writer, Zulfikar Ghose, with whom he produced a joint collection of stories, Statement Against Corpses. Like Johnson's early stories his first two novels, Travelling People and Albert Angelo, at first appear relatively conventional in plot terms. However, the first novel uses several innovative devices and includes a section set out as a filmscript. The second includes famously cut-through pages to enable the reader to skip forward. His work became progressively even more experimental. The Unfortunates was published in a box with no binding and House Mother Normal was written in purely chronological order such that the various characters' thoughts and experiences would cross each other and become intertwined, not just page by page, but sentence by sentence. He won the Eric Gregory Award in 1962.
Johnson led and associated with a loosely constituted circle of "experimental" authors in Sixties Britain, which included Alan Burns, Eva Figes, Rayner Heppenstall, Ann Quin, Stefan Themerson, and Wilson Harris among others. Many of these figures contributed to London Consequences, a novel consisting of a palimpsest of chapters passed between a range of participating authors and set in London, edited by Margaret Drabble and Johnson. Johnson also made numerous experimental films, published poetry, and wrote reviews, short stories and plays. For many years he was the poetry editor of Transatlantic Review.
He is mentioned several times in Paul Theroux's account of his friendship with V. S. Naipaul, Sir Vidia's Shadow.

Death and legacy

At the age of 40, increasingly depressed by his failure to succeed commercially, and beset by family problems, Johnson took his own life by slitting his wrists.
Johnson was largely unknown to the wider reading public at the time of his death, but has a growing cult following. A critically acclaimed film adaptation of his last novel to appear while he was alive, Christie Malry's Own Double-Entry, was released in 2000. Singer-songwriter Joe Pernice paid tribute to Johnson on the 2006 Pernice Brothers album Live a Little. Jonathan Coe's 2004 biography Like a Fiery Elephant has already led to a renewal of interest in Johnson's work. Coe himself is now a president of the B. S. Johnson Society, which aims "to bring closer Johnson scholars, readers and aficionados alike in their various approaches to the author’s life and work."
In April 2013, the British Film Institute released You're Human Like the Rest of Them, a collection of Johnson's films, as part of the BFI Flipside DVD series.
In 2015, Five Leaves Bookshop in Nottingham held an event called "But I Know This City!" based around Johnson's novel The Unfortunates, set in Nottingham, which allowed participants to travel around the city and listen to live readings of the novel's sections in whichever order they chose.
Indie pop band Los Campesinos! cites the literature of B. S. Johnson among their non-musical influences.
There is a large collection of B. S. Johnson's literary papers and correspondence in the British Library.

Novels