
Lord of the Flies
by William Golding
A group of British schoolboys stranded on an uninhabited island organise themselves — and gradually descend from democratic order to murderous tribalism.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)British · b. 1911
Nobel Prize in Literature 1983; Booker Prize 1980 (Rites of Passage); CBE
William Golding was a British novelist and Nobel laureate whose Lord of the Flies remains one of the most widely read and debated novels in the English literary canon.
William Golding worked as a teacher and served in the Royal Navy during the Second World War — experiences that left a permanent mark on his understanding of human violence and institutional order. Lord of the Flies (1954), rejected by numerous publishers before finding a home at Faber, is an allegorical novel in which a group of British schoolboys stranded on a desert island without adults rapidly abandon the civilised behaviour instilled in them and descend into savagery. It was written, Golding said, as a direct response to the optimism of R.M. Ballantyne’s Victorian adventure The Coral Island, which imagines British boys triumphing through pluck and virtue in similar circumstances.
The novel’s thesis — that the impulse toward cruelty and domination is not the exception but the norm in human social organisation, requiring only the removal of external constraint to reassert itself — has made it both immensely powerful in the classroom and a source of ongoing debate. Rutger Bregman’s Humankind (2019) specifically challenges the Lord of the Flies thesis by arguing that real-world analogues (groups of children actually stranded on islands) have produced cooperation rather than savagery. Golding’s allegory may tell us more about mid-century British anxieties than about human nature universally. This debate does not diminish the novel’s artistry.
Golding’s subsequent novels — The Inheritors, Pincher Martin, The Spire, and the Nobel-winning Rites of Passage — are less widely read but technically remarkable. He was a writer of unusual formal intelligence, and each novel represents a distinct formal challenge. The Spire, an account of a medieval cathedral’s construction driven by one man’s religious obsession, is particularly extraordinary. His Nobel citation praised his gift for “the human condition in the world of today” — a formulation that captures his peculiar combination of moral severity and literary craft.

by William Golding
A group of British schoolboys stranded on an uninhabited island organise themselves — and gradually descend from democratic order to murderous tribalism.
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by William Golding
An early nineteenth-century sailing ship crosses the equator. Edmund Talbot, a young aristocrat keeping a journal for his godfather's amusement, records the humiliation and death of the Reverend Colley—a man whose shame kills him as surely as disease. Golding's Booker Prize winner and the first of the To the Ends of the Earth trilogy.
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by William Golding
Told from inside the consciousness of Lok, a Neanderthal man, the novel follows a small tribe as they encounter Homo sapiens—'the new people'—and are destroyed by them. Golding's response to H.G. Wells's smug confidence that human progress was a good thing.
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Where to start with William Golding — whether to begin with Lord of the Flies, The Inheritors, or Rites of Passage. A complete reading guide to Golding's novels.
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William Golding's British schoolboys — Piggy, Ralph, Jack, and Simon — descend into tribalism and murder on a tropical island. These books share its diagnosis of human nature, its horror at what innocence can become, and its refusal to comfort.
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