Roy Fuller (born Feb. 11, 1912, Failsworth, Lancashire, Eng.—died Sept. 27, 1991, London) was a British poet and novelist, best known for his concise and observant verse chronicling the daily routines of home and office.
Educated privately in Lancashire, Fuller became a solicitor in 1934 and served in the Royal Navy (1941–45) during World War II. After the war he pursued a dual career as a lawyer and a man of letters; he served as assistant solicitor (1938–58) and then solicitor (1958–69) for the Woolwich Equitable Building Society, and he was professor of poetry at the University of Oxford from 1968 to 1973. He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1970.
Fuller’s first volume of poetry appeared in 1939. The poems published in The Middle of a War (1942) and A Lost Season (1944) chronicle his wartime service and show him intensely concerned with the social and political conditions of his time. Epitaphs and Occasions (1949) satirized the postwar world, but in Brutus’s Orchard (1957) and Collected Poems, 1936–61 (1962), Fuller adopted a more reflective tone and showed greater interest in psychological and philosophical subjects. A lucid and detached tone persists in such later volumes as Buff (1965), New Poems (1968), From the Joke Shop (1975), and Available for Dreams (1989) as the poet sardonically reflects on old age. New and Collected Poems, 1934–84 (1985) is an authoritative collection of his verse. Available for Dreams (1989) and Last Poems (1993) contain his last verse.
Fuller wrote several novels, including Image of a Society (1956), which portrays the personal and professional conflicts within a building society (savings and loan association); The Ruined Boys (1959); and My Child, My Sister (1965). He also wrote crime thrillers and juvenile fiction, and his memoirs were published in four volumes from 1980 to 1991.