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British author David Lodge, twice nominated for Booker, dies

Lodge's family says they were ‘very proud’ of the prolific writer
David Lodge. Photo: X@vintagebooks

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British author David Lodge, who was twice short-listed for the country's leading literary prize, has died. He was 89.

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Lodge's family said they were “very proud” of the prolific writer, who died on New Year's Day, according to a statement issued by his publisher, Penguin Random House.

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Lodge is probably best known for his two Booker Prize-nominated novels, 1984's ‘Small World: An Academic Romance’ and ‘Nice Works’ four years later.

The two novels followed on from 1975's ‘Changing Places’, the first in a trilogy series about a fictional university. The trilogy was adapted successfully for television in the 1980s.

Lodge, who also wrote memoirs and television scripts, taught in the English department at the University of Birmingham between 1960 and 1987 before retiring to focus on writing.

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“It was interesting growing up with David Lodge as a father," his family said. “Conversation over the supper table was always lively, our mother Mary very much held her own, meanwhile, David was ready with a reference book to look up something that was being disputed."

Lodge's publisher, Liz Foley, said that it was “a true privilege and joy to be David's publisher and I will miss him very much.”

He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1998 for services to literature.

Lodge's wife, Mary, died in January 2022. He is survived by three children, Stephen, Christopher and Julia.

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