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British author AS Byatt, who won Booker prize for Possession, dies aged 87

  • Her career spanned nearly six decades, but Byatt is best known for the 1991 novel, which pits a wicked US biographer against a downtrodden English scholar
  • She courted controversy in 2003 when she questioned adults reading the hugely successful Harry Potter books by JK Rowling

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AS Byatt reads at the launch of a series of “Pocket Canons” at St James’ Church in London. Photo: PA via AP
Reuters

Booker-prize winning British novelist Antonia Susan Byatt, known most commonly as AS Byatt, has died aged 87, her publisher said in a statement on Friday.

Byatt, whose career spanned nearly 60 years, was best known for her 1990 novel Possession: A Romance. She was the sister of the novelist Margaret Drabble, and the siblings drew parallels with the Brontes, a comparison they tended to spurn.

Her publisher Chatto & Windus, part of Penguin Random House, described her as “one of the most significant writers and critics of our time”.

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“She died peacefully at home surrounded by close family,” it said in a statement. “Antonia had a remarkable mind which produced a unique creative vision.”

A mother of three daughters, Byatt was struck by tragedy when her only son Charles was killed crossing the road in the week of his 11th birthday.

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Byatt was born on August 24, 1936, in the northern English city of Sheffield and was educated at a Quaker school in nearby York. She studied at Cambridge and Oxford before going on to teach English and American Literature in London from 1972.

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