John Wain (born March 14, 1925, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, Eng.—died May 24, 1994, Oxford, Oxfordshire) was an English novelist and poet whose early works caused him, by their radical tone, to be spoken of as one of the “Angry Young Men” of the 1950s. He was also a critic and playwright.
Wain was educated at St. John’s College, Oxford, of which he subsequently became a fellow. He was a lecturer in English literature at the University of Reading from 1949 to 1955 and from 1973 to 1978 was professor of poetry at Oxford.
His poetry includes Mixed Feelings (1951), A Word Carved on a Sill (1956), Weep Before God (1961), Wildtrack (1965), Letters to Five Artists (1969), and Feng (1975). Poems 1949–1979 was published in 1980. His poetry, witty and brittle, has been criticized for its occasionally contrived cleverness.
Hurry On Down (1953) was Wain’s first and, to some critics, best novel. (Other contenders would probably be Strike the Father Dead [1962] and A Winter in the Hills [1970].) It follows the adventures of a university graduate valiantly trying to establish some sort of personal identity in the bewildering and rapidly changing society of postwar Britain. Wain’s other novels include Living in the Present (1955), The Contenders (1958), The Young Visitors (1965), The Smaller Sky (1967), and The Pardoner’s Tale (1978). His short stories are collected in Nuncle and Other Stories (1960), Death of the Hind Legs (1966), and The Life Guard and Other Stories (1971). Wain wrote a considerable body of literary criticism, including Preliminary Essays (1957), Essays on Literature and Ideas (1963), and The Living World of Shakespeare (1964; rev. ed., 1979). He wrote a biography of Samuel Johnson (1974, with a revised edition in 1980) and an autobiography, Sprightly Running (1962). In 1983 he was made a Companion of the Order of the British Empire.