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Ian Jack, journalist who edited Granta and The Independent on Sunday and had few peers as a long-form writer – obituary

He had an intense feeling for the past, and was, said a former colleague, ‘an excellent reporter, ferreting researcher and beautiful writer’

Ian Jack, who has died aged 77, was one of the most outstanding journalists of his generation. As a reporter, he was responsible for pieces that went unusually deep into a subject and stayed unusually long in the reader’s mind. As an editor, he took the helm of both The Independent on Sunday newspaper and the literary magazine Granta, nurturing writers who would go on to eminence themselves.

Jack reached the top level of what used to be called “the higher journalism” without ever having been to university. Largely brought up on the east coast of Scotland, he started out on local newspapers before, in the 1970s, becoming part of the team at The Sunday Times who worked under its fabled editor (and another non-graduate) Harold Evans.

Jack had an intense feel for the past but it was neither nostalgic nor conservative. Ships and trains and the engineering stories behind them were a passionate interest. So too was India, from where he reported extensively. His pieces, which in later life appeared mostly in The Guardian and the London Review of Books, were always rooted in people’s everyday experiences, and always expressive of Jack’s own decency.

Questions around civic values seemed to lie at the heart of everything Jack wrote about. He mourned the decline in those values but his aim was to understand the process rather than to condemn it.

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