• Paul Bailey
  • Michael Baldwin
  • Iain Banks
  • John Banville
  • Richard Barber
  • Juliet Barker
  • Pat Barker CBE
  • Sebastian Barker
  • Frank Barlow CBE FBA FRHistS
  • Correlli Barnett CBE
  • Sebastian Barry
  • Jacques Barzun
  • Susan Bassnett
  • Jonathan Bate CBE FBA
  • Nina Bawden CBE
  • Martin Bax
  • John Bayley CBE FBA
  • C.A. Bayly FBA FRHistS
  • Dame Gillian Beer DBE FBA
  • Antony Beevor
  • Rosalind Belben
  • Anne Olivier Bell
  • Bernard Bergonzi
  • Christopher Bigsby
  • Dea Birkett
  • Julia Blackburn
  • Malorie Blackman
  • Ronald Blythe, Benson Medallist
  • James T. Boulton FBA
  • William Boyd CBE
  • Melvyn Bragg (Lord Bragg)
  • Piers Brendon
  • Raymond Briggs
  • Robin Briggs
  • Michael Brock CBE FRHistS
  • Hugh Brogan
  • Anita Brookner CBE
  • Alan Brownjohn
  • James Buchan
  • Brian Burland
  • John Burnside
  • Marilyn Butler FBA
  • A.S. Byatt (Dame Antonia Duffy DBE)

William Fiennes – Year of election 2009

William Fiennes

William Fiennes’s first book, The Snow Geese, published in 2002, was a travel book in a genre of its own, shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize and winning the Hawthornden Prize and a Somerset Maugham Award. In 2003 its author was named Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year. He then tried to be a novelist. “Naively,” he told an interviewer, “I thought if your first book did well, you’d reach this magical plateau of being a writer, and that other books would come easily. The career seemed over. I sent off for the application forms for the civil service; I looked into fast-tracking as a GP. But the real problem was that I didn’t care about the characters in those attempted novels. I only wanted to write out of strong feeling, and, once I realised that, I knew what to do.” His second book, The Music Room, published in April, a memoir of childhood and of his severely epileptic brother, has been called “a small masterpiece”.

Fiennes spent two years as Fellow in the Creative Arts at Wolfson College, Oxford, and has been Writer-in-Residence at the American School in London, and, since 2007, at Cranford Community College, in Hounslow. He is a director and co-founder of the charity First Story, which supports creativity and literacy in challenging secondary schools.