Morris West (born April 26, 1916, Melbourne, Vic., Australia—died Oct. 9, 1999, Sydney) was an Australian novelist noted for such best-sellers as The Devil’s Advocate (1959) and The Shoes of the Fisherman (1963).
Educated at the University of Melbourne, West taught modern languages and mathematics as a member of the Christian Brothers order in New South Wales and Tasmania from 1933 until he joined the army in 1939, having left the order before taking his final vows. In 1943 he was released from the army and shortly thereafter began working for the radio network of The Herald in Melbourne. He later became a partner in Australasian Radio Productions, but after 10 years he suffered a breakdown, sold his share of the business, and settled near Sydney as a writer. In 1955 he established himself in Sorrento, Italy. Though West had previously written several novels, his first popular success was Children of the Sun (1957), a nonfiction account of the slum children of Naples. It was followed by such novels as The Devil’s Advocate, Daughter of Silence (1961), The Shoes of the Fisherman, The Ambassador (1965), The Tower of Babel (1968), Summer of the Red Wolf (1971), The Navigator (1976), Proteus (1979), and The Clowns of God (1981). West worked with themes of international interest; his best-known books combine religion and intrigue in what have been called “religious thrillers.” His autobiography, A View from the Ridge: The Testimony of a Twentieth-Century Christian, was published in 1996.