The Herald

Graham Joyce

- ALASDAIR STEVEN

Fantasy writer Born: October 22, 1954; Died: September 9, 2014.

GRAHAM Joyce, who has died aged 59, was a creative writer of fantasy fiction who won many awar d s and commanded a large and popular readership, winning the British fantasy award on six occasions.

Part of his success was his desire to always break fresh literary territory – he delighted in being unusual and unpredicta­ble. It was this ability to surprise that made him such a fascinatin­g story teller. Joyce was also an inventive wordsmith who painted a picture of ordinary life which was easily recognisab­le by the reader.

Such qualities are outstandin­gly seen in The Tooth Fairy (1996) which was his most widely praised novel. It tells of how a lad accidental­ly sees the tooth fairy in the middle of the night after placing a tooth under his pillow. No one else can see the fairy but Joyce brilliantl­y concocts an enchanting tale that has a sinister and defining edge.

Graham William Joyce was born outside Coventry, his father was a coal miner and it was not an easy childhood. Joyce did not display any academic polish – he failed his 11-plus but continued his studies at Bishop Lonsdale College in Derby, where he qualified with a degree in education and teaching. His desire for improvemen­t was further witnessed when he took a Master’s at Leicester University in modern English and American literature. Later he wrote his PhD from Nottingham Trent University.

Initially, Joyce worked for the National Associatio­n of Youth Clubs as a developmen­t officer but in 1988 with his future wife he moved to Greece for a year and wrote his first novel, Dreamside. It basically deals with four psychology students and the uncompromi­sing power of the subconscio­us. Its success allowed Joyce to concentrat­e on writing fiction.

There was an outstandin­g exception. In 2009 Joyce, a life-long football follower and a keen goalkeeper, wrote Simple Goalkeepin­g Made Spectacula­r which he cannily subtitled, A Riotous Football- ing Memoir about the Loneliest Position on the Field. It was runner-up in the William Hill sports book of the year and one critic wrote: “Every goalkeeper’s wife or girlfriend should read this book.”

One particular­ly admired novel was The Year of the Ladybird set in the sweltering summer of 1976. A student works at a holiday camp and experience­s racial and social tensions. Joyce returns to a theme he so often explored in his books with much insight – the emergence of a young man approachin­g maturity.

Joyce was a prolific author and his other titles included Not Strangers, In a Nutshell, The Facts of Life, Some Kind of Fairy Tale and, his final and poignant book, A Perfect Day And The Shocking Clarity Of Cancer.

Joyce had taught creative writing at Nottingham Trent University since 1996. With typical courage he returned this summer, during a remission period, to teach his fiction group. He was a much-respected teacher who inspired many writers with novel ideas and a sense of purpose.

Throughout his career he had demonstrat­ed a strong concern for education and how it is administer­ed. Earlier this year he organised a petition heavily criticisin­g the then Education Secretary, Michael Gove. Always forthright in his opinions he described Gove as, “singlehand­edly wreaking havoc on the morale and practice of school learning”.

Only last month Joyce was heard on Radio 4 in Talking About Cancer, a programme designed to explain the language associated with the disease. Joyce brought an honesty and sincerity to the programme. He married Suzanne Johnsen while they were students at Leicester. She and their two children survive him.

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