Ian Grant JackFRSL (7 February 1945 – 28 October 2022) was a British reporter, writer and editor. He edited the Independent on Sunday, the literary magazine Granta and wrote regularly for The Guardian.
After a false start as a would-be librarian,[5] Jack joined The Glasgow Herald as a trainee journalist in 1965.[3] After a short spell in its head office he was sent to work on two weekly papers in Lanarkshire, the now-defunct Cambuslang Advertiser and the East Kilbride News.[6] Later he worked for the Scottish Daily Express at its Glasgow offices.[7] In 1970, he joined The Sunday Times in London, where he became a section editor and then a foreign correspondent-cum-feature writer with a special interest in South Asia and particularly India, which he began to visit in the mid-1970s. From 1986 to 1989, he wrote for The Observer and Vanity Fair,[8] and then joined the team that created The Independent on Sunday, which he edited from 1991 to 1995.[9][10] His editorship of the quarterly Granta magazine, to which he had previously contributed as a writer, spanned 47 issues over twelve years to 2007.[11] While at Granta, Jack also commissioned and edited books by Diana Athill, Simon Gray, Janet Malcolm and Travis Elborough, among others. He contributed regularly to The Guardian from 2001, and began to write a weekly column for the paper six years later.[3][12] He occasionally taught at the India Institute, King's College London.[13]
In 2009, Jack published a collection of essays and previously unpublished writings entitled The Country Formerly Known as Great Britain.[14][15] One reviewer wrote of Jack's handling of time in this book: "He is up there with a fiction writer such as Alice Munro in his grasp of its ebb and flow, his awareness that its strong but rapidly changing currents often leave us wondering not only what we can remember, but what we should."[16]Alexander Chancellor called the book "superb", and added: "Collections of columns and newspaper articles are not usually a very good idea. They quickly become stale and dated, and one sometimes wonders what the point of them is except to deceive journalists into thinking that their ephemeral scribblings deserve some permanence. Jack is an exception to the rule."[17]The Economist wrote: "At the heart of the book are three magnificent essays, about the Hatfield train crash of 2000; the sinking of the Titanic and the film Titanic (1997); and the lost cinemas of Farnworth, Mr Jack's home town, which is also a circuitous epitaph for a lost brother. His contributions to 'this unequal struggle to preserve and remember' cumulatively transcend journalism and attain the status of literature."[18]
Jack married Aparna Bagchi in 1979; the couple divorced in 1992.[3] He lived in Highbury, London,[21] with his second wife, Lindy Sharpe.[3] They had two children,[3] and spent a part of every year on the Isle of Bute in the Firth of Clyde.[22][23]
Jack's paternal grandmother was born in India[24] and lived with his grandfather in the now-demolished mining village of Lassodie, between Dunfermline and Kelty.[25][26]
^Chancellor, Alexander (9 September 2010). "A lost civilisation". Spectator Book Club. Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
^Jack, Ian (11 January 2011). "Cousin Walter". The Country Formerly Known as Great Britain. Random House. p. 253. ISBN978-1-4464-4809-0. My great grandfather Birmingham was an Irishman (nobody knew from where, or of what religion) who joined the Royal Artillery and went to India, where most of his children were born, including my father's mother