
People note British writer Sir William Gerald Golding for his dark novels, especially The Lord of the Flies (1954); he won the Nobel Prize of 1983 for literature. People best know this British novelist, poet, and playwright for this novel. Golding spent two years, focusing on sciences, in Oxford but changed his educational emphasis to English, especially Anglo-Saxon, literature. During World War II, he served as part of the royal Navy, which he left five years later. This experience strongly influenced his future novels. Later, he taught and focused on writing. Classical Greek literature, such as that of Euripides, and The Battle of Maldon , an Anglo-Saxon oeuvre of unknown author influenced him. College students in the 1950s and 1960s gave the attention to Lord of the Flies, first novel of Golding; their attention drove that of literary critics. He was awarded the Booker Prize for literature in 1980 for his novel Rites of Passage , the first book of the trilogy To the Ends of the Earth. He received knighthood in 1988. In 2008, The Times ranked Golding third on their list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945."
Series
Books

The Brass Butterfly
1958

The Scorpion God
Three Short Novels
1971

Lord of the Flies
The Graphic Novel
1954

A moving target
1982

An Egyptian Journal
1985

The Hot Gates and Other Occasional Pieces
1965

Kärbeste Jumal. Mereristsed
1989

The Inheritors
1955

Close Quarters
1987

The Double Tongue
1995

Free Fall
1959

Rites of Passage
1980

The Spire
1964

To the Ends of the Earth
1991

The Paper Men
1984

A.R. Ammons
1986

Pincher Martin
1956

Lord of the Flies
1954

Darkness Visible
1979

The Pyramid
1967

Fire Down Below
1989