Lord of the Flies Project Site (Major) by Andy Ong (3/22/99)
Lord of the Flies by William Golding is a book about
a group of young boys - consisting of the "bigguns" and
the "littluns" - that are stranded on an island when
their escape plane crashes. The story takes place during
World War II, and they're leaving because of the threat
of nuclear war. Ralph first meets Piggy, the logical one of the group,
and they find a conch in a lagoon on the island. Then, when Ralph
blows the conch, all the boys come to him, and he's
chosen as the leader. The boys try to keep an orderly
and democratic "government," but without the right
guidance, they are led into a more primitive, and
savage, living by Jack.
About The Author: William Golding (from Barron's Notes)
William Golding was born in 1911 and grew up in the years before World War II. That war changed thinking about man's essential nature. Before the war people generally believed that
man was essentially good-hearted and society often was evil. However, the atrocities of the war made it impossible for many people to believe any longer in man's basic innocence. You
can see the influence of this shift in thinking in Golding's works.
Some of Golding's favorite childhood authors were Edgar Rice Burroughs (Tarzan of the Apes), Robert Ballantyne (Coral Island), and Jules Verne (Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the
Sea). Each of these books portrays man as a basically good creature who struggles to avoid the evils of society.
Golding yearned to be like the characters in the fables and stories he read. The island setting for Lord of the Flies and the names Ralph, Jack, and Simon have been taken from Coral Island.
"They held me rapt," Golding once said of the books he read. "I dived with the Nautilus, was shot round the moon, crossed Darkest Africa in a balloon, descended to the center of the
earth, drifted in the South Atlantic, dying of thirst.... It always sent me indoors for a drink-the fresh waters of the Amazon."
At about the age of twelve Golding decided to be a writer. He planned a twelve-volume work on trade unions but could never complete the enormous undertaking. With his love of
reading and his early attempts at writing, Golding of course studied literature in college.
When World War II began in 1939, Golding joined the Royal Navy. He saw action against German warships, he was in antisubmarine and antiaircraft operations, and in 1944 he was
involved in the D-Day naval support for the landings on the beaches of Normandy. He continued to read the classics even as he acquired a reputation for loving tense combat. And his
war experiences changed his view about mankind's essential nature. Because of the atrocities he witnessed, Golding came to believe that there was a very dark and evil side to man. "The
war," he said, "was unlike any other fought in Europe. It taught us not fighting, politics or the follies of nationalism, but about the given nature of man."
After the war Golding returned to teaching in a boys' school, which may explain why the characters in Lord of the Flies seem so real. Ralph, Jack, Piggy, Simon, and the other boys are
based on the faces and voices of children Golding knew. Thus his reading of the classics, his war experience, and his new insight into humanity laid the groundwork for his writing.
His first three novels were very much like novels he had read, and he called them the "rubbish" of imitation. They have never been published. His fourth novel was Lord of the Flies, and
when it was finally accepted for publication in 1954, it had been turned down by more than twenty publishers.
The book was not considered a success at first. It was not until the 1960s, when it had captured the imaginations of college and high school students, that critics began to acknowledge
Golding's talent. Even now there are differing opinions about the novel. Some believe Golding's writing is bombastic and didactic, that he does not allow you to have any opinion but his.
Other critics see him as the greatest English writer of our time. You will find that part of the fun of his book lies in deciding for yourself what you think.
Golding has continued to write in spite of the controversy over his work. It would seem that the criticism, rather than frightening him, only challenges him to continue writing. In the same
way, Golding challenges readers to think about what he considers most important: the true nature of human beings.
The three novels that followed Lord of the Flies--The Inheritors, Pincher Martin, and Free Fall--brought him more success, while the controversy over his talent, or lack of it, continued.
Eventually Golding stopped teaching to write full time. In 1983 Golding was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, which is given a writer not for one particular volume but for the body of
his work. This was the recognition and respect that many believe he had deserved all along.
Biography on William Golding
Click here for more pages on Lord of the Flies.
Map of the Island
Character Analysis - Discussion About the Main Characters
Themes - Themes from Barron's Notes and Quotes from the Book
Themes: Page 2 - Themes Continued. . .
Setting - Description and Picture of the Island
Plot - What Happens (from Barron's Notes)
Text about the author is copyrighted by Barron's Book Notes, (C) 1984