Angus Stewart
Angus John Mackintosh Stewart (1936-1998) was a British writer and photographer, best known for his acclaimed novel Sandel (1968), which depicts an unorthodox relationship between an Oxford undergraduate and a chorister.[1][2][3] His debut work 'The Stile' appeared in a 1964 anthology, and he won the Richard Hillary Memorial Prize in 1965; later works include Snow in Harvest (1969), Tangier: A Writer’s Notebook (1977), and poetry collection Sense and Inconsequence (1972).[1][2] After Sandel, he lived in Tangier, Morocco, exploring self-discovery and drugs, influencing his subsequent writings.[1]
Adelaide, Australia
Nov 22, 1936
Fiction
Travel
Poetry