![]() Fowles' other fiction includes Daniel Martin (1977), Mantissa (1982) and A Maggot (1985). The French Lieutenant's Woman won the Silver Pen Award and the WH Smith Literary Award and was adapted as a film in 1981 with a screenplay by Harold Pinter. His best-known fiction includes his first novel, The Collector (1963), the story of a young clerk, a butterfly collector, who kidnaps a young woman The Magus (1966), set on a Greek island where a schoolteacher confronts a series of disturbing events and The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), a formally experimental novel that tells the tale of Victorian palaeontologist Charles Smithson and his involvement with the notorious and enigmatic Sarah Woodruff. After graduating he taught English at the University of Poitiers and then at the Anagyriou School at Spetses. He was educated at Bedford School and New College, Oxford, where he read French and German. John Fowles was born at Leighton-on-Sea, Essex in 1926, where he lived until the outbreak of the Second World War. ![]()
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