BBC News
Cult author JG Ballard dies at 78

The author JG Ballard, famed for novels such as Crash and Empire of the 
Sun, has died aged 78 after a long illness.

His agent Margaret Hanbury said the author had been ill "for several 
years" and had died on Sunday morning.

Despite being referred to as a science fiction writer, Jim Ballard said 
his books were instead "picturing the psychology of the future".

His most acclaimed novel was Empire of the Sun, based on his childhood 
in a Japanese prison camp in China.

The author of 15 novels and scores of short stories, Ballard grew up 
amongst the expatriate community in Shanghai.

During World War II, at the age of 12, he was interned for three years 
in a camp run by the Japanese.

He later moved to Britain and in the early 1960s became a full-time writer.

Ballard built up a passionate readership, particularly after Empire of 
The Sun, a fictionalised account of his childhood, was made into a film 
by Steven Spielberg.

He said of his experiences: "I have - I won't say happy - not unpleasant 
memories of the camp. I remember a lot of the casual brutality and 
beatings-up that went on, but at the same time we children were playing 
a hundred and one games all the time!"

His friend and fellow author, Iain Sinclair, said Ballard had developed 
into a major literary figure.

"He was one of the first to take up the whole idea of ecological 
catastrophe. He was fascinated by celebrity early on, the cult of the 
star and suicides of cars, motorways, edgelands of cities.

"All of these things he was one of the first to create almost a 
philosophy of. And I think as time has gone on, he's become a major, 
major figure."

'Ballardian world'

Director David Cronenberg brought Ballard's infamous book about the 
sexual desires stimulated by car crashes to the screen in the film Crash.

The film caused a media stir, adding to Ballard's reputation for 
courting controversy.

In later years he wrote other acclaimed novels such as Super-Cannes and 
Millennium People.

Hephzibah Anderson, former fiction editor at the Daily Mail and books 
columnist for the Observer, said Ballard's work had anticipated life as 
it was now.

"If you look at the start of his career, he began writing science 
fiction stories and we was regarded as very avant garde.

"And there was a kind of violence lurking beneath the texture of these 
novels. And they've come to seem less and less futuristic and you know 
it's as if we're embodying, we're living in now a kind of Ballardian world."

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