Melvin Burgess


Melvin Burgess is a British writer of children's fiction. He became famous in 1998 with the publication of Junk, about heroin-addicted teenagers on the streets of Bristol. In Britain, Junk became one of the best-known young adult books of the decade. Burgess won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book by a British author. For the 10th anniversary in 2007 it was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works, selected by a panel to compose the ballot for a public election of the all-time favourite.

Early life

Burgess was born in the Municipal Borough of Twickenham, Middlesex, England.

Author

He completed his first book accepted for publication in his mid-thirties: a novel, The Cry of the Wolf, published by Andersen Press in 1990, which was highly commended by librarians for the Carnegie Medal, which Gillian Cross won for Wolf. Cross features a girl and a metaphorical wolf, the characters being the last grey wolf in Britain.
Andersen published all of Burgess' books until the mid-1990s. The Baby and Fly Pie was another highly commended runner-up for the Carnegie Medal, a distinction that was roughly annual.
Junk won the 1996 Medal and also the annual Guardian Children's Fiction Prize judged by a panel of British children's writers, which The Guardian confers only once upon any author. Burgess is one of six authors, all 1967 to 1996, who won the Carnegie Medal for their Guardian Prize-winning books.
Kite features a boy who hatches a red kite egg.
Burgess again courted predictable controversy in 2003, with the publication of Doing It, which dealt with underage sex. In the U.S. it was adapted as a television series, Life as We Know It.
In other books such as The Ghost Behind the Wall, Burgess has dealt with less realist and sometimes fantastic themes. Bloodtide and Bloodsong are post-apocalypse adaptations of Volsunga Saga.
In 2001 Burgess wrote the novelisation of the film Billy Elliot, based on Lee Hall's screenplay.

Style

is a narrative technique used in many of his most famous novels.

Works

Novels