Mervyn Jones (writer)
Mervyn Jones was a British novelist, journalist and biographer, the son of psychoanalyst Ernest Jones.
Mervyn Jones wrote 29 novels, including John and Mary, the basis for the 1969 film, and Holding On, which was adapted for television in 1977.
Jones also wrote non-fiction, reportage and biography, including a fictional biography of Joseph Stalin in 1970 and a biography of his friend Michael Foot, the former Labour Party leader, in 1994. A former Communist, Jones wrote for the Daily Worker, and later the New Reasoner and Tribune; he was later assistant editor at the New Statesman.
He died in 2010 at age 87.
Selected works
Fiction
- No Time To Be Young
- The New Town
- Helen Blake
- On the Last Day
- A Set of Wives
- John and Mary
- A Survivor
- Joseph
- Mr Armitage Isn't Back Yet
- Holding On
- The Revolving Door
- Strangers
- Lord Richard's Passion
- Twilight of the Day
- The Pursuit of Happiness
- Scenes From Bourgeois Life
- Nobody's Fault
- Today The Struggle
- The Beautiful Words
- A Short Time To Live
- Two Women and Their Man
- Joanna's Luck
- Coming Home
- ''That Year in Paris''
Non-fiction
- Guilty Men
- Potbank: A Social Enquiry into Life in the Potteries
- Big Two: Life in America and Russia
- Two Ears of Corn – Oxfam in Action
- Kingsley Martin: Portrait and Self-portrait
- Rhodesia: The White Judge's Burden
- Life on the Dole
- Privacy
- The Oil Rush
- Chances: An Autobiography
- A Radical Life: The Biography of Megan Lloyd George
- Michael Foot
- ''The Amazing Victorian: A Life of George Meredith''