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UK authors of the future unveiled
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The authors' ages range from 22 to 61 and includes
several award-winners and one writer rejected 76 times by
publishers
The book industry has
chosen 25 authors as the future of British writing.
Publishers, editors and agents were asked to nominate the current
and emerging authors most likely to make an impact over the next 25
years.
More than 100 names were submitted. Waterstone's selected the
final list of 13 women and 12 men, drawn up to mark the bookseller's
25 years in business.
The list includes new authors, such as Gautam Malkani, and more
established names, such as Jon McGregor.
Naomi Alderman - Her first novel, Disobedience, was set
in north London's Orthodox Jewish community. She lives in Hendon.
Susanna Clarke - After 10 years of writing, her 800-page
debut, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, was longlisted for the Man
Booker Prize. She lives in Cambridge.
Siobhan Dowd - Dowd based her novel, Swift Pure Cry, on
the unsolved "Kerry Babies" murders and the death of schoolgirl Ann
Lovett, both in her native Ireland. She currently lives in Oxford.
Jasper Fforde - The former film industry worker received
76 rejection letters before finding a publisher for his debut, The
Eyre Affair. He lives in Wales.
Julia Golding - Golding has won the Nestle Children's
Book Prize and the Waterstone's Children's Book Prize for her
stories about feisty heroine Cat Royal. She lives in Oxford.
Emily Gravett - Gravett writes and illustrates picture
books for children, including Wolves, Orange Pear Apple Bear and
Meerkat Mail. She lives in Brighton.
Jane Harris - A former writer-in-residence at HM Prison
Durham, Harris has written several award-winning short films and
short stories, in addition to her first novel, The Observations. She
lives in London.
Steven Hall - Hall's debut novel was The Raw Shark Texts.
Film rights have been optioned and the book has been sold to 20
international publishers. He lives in Hull.
Peter Hobbs - His first book, The Short Day Dying, was
shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel Award and was notable for
containing almost no punctuation. He lives in London.
Marina Lewycka - The 61-year-old Ukrainian was born in a
refugee camp in Germany. A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian
has been translated into more than 30 languages, was longlisted for
the Man Booker Prize and has been on best-seller lists for almost a
year in paperback. She lives in Sheffield.
Gautam Malkani - The Cambridge graduate and Financial
Times journalist divided opinion with his debut, Londonstani, which
chronicled the lives of British Asians in Hounslow, west London and
was written in "rudeboy" patois. He lives in London.
Robert Macfarlane - His first book, Mountains of the
Mind: A History of a Fascination, was born out of Macfarlane's
passion for mountaineering. He lives in Cambridge.
Charlotte Mendelson - Her second novel, Daughters of
Jerusalem, won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and the Somerset
Maugham Award. Her latest, When We Were Bad, was published this
month. She lives in London.
Jon McGregor - His debut novel If Nobody Speaks of
Remarkable Things made him the youngest contender on the 2002 Man
Booker Prize longlist. He lives in Nottingham.
Richard Morgan - A former tutor at Strathclyde
University. Two of Morgan's novels, Altered Carbon and Market
Forces, have been optioned by Hollywood studios. He also wrote the
Black Widow comic book series for Marvel. He lives in Glasgow.
Maggie O'Farrell - Her debut, After You'd Gone, won a
Betty Trask Award and was followed by best-sellers My Lover's Lover,
The Distance Between Us and The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox. She
lives in Edinburgh.
Helen Oyeyemi - Nigerian-born Oyeyemi wrote The Icarus
Girl while still at school. It was shortlisted for a British Book
Award, has been published in 18 countries and has been adapted for
the stage. The Cambridge graduate recently won a creative writing
fellowship from Columbia University in the US.
Jo Pratt - The food stylist and home economist began her
career working behind the scenes for Gary Rhodes and Gordon Ramsay.
She is now a regular on TV cookery shows. Her first book, The
Nation's Favourite Food, was published in 2003. She lives in London.
Dominic Sandbrook - Sandbrook is a member of the Oxford
University history faculty. His first book, a biography of US
politician Eugene McCarthy, was followed by Never Had It So Good, a
history of post-war Britain. He lives in north Oxfordshire.
CJ Sansom - Sansom gave up his career as a solicitor to
become a full-time author. He made his name writing historical crime
novels featuring Tudor lawyer Matthew Shardlake. He lives in Sussex.
Chris Simms - His first novel, Outside The White Lines,
features a serial killer who stalks Britain's motorways. Simms came
up with the idea while stranded on the hard shoulder of the M40 on
his way to his mother's house for Christmas. He lives in Manchester.
Nick Stone - His father is historian Norman Stone and his
mother descends from one of the oldest families in Haiti, the
setting for his novel Mr Clarinet. He lives in London.
Louise Welsh - The best-selling Scottish author of The
Cutting Room and Tamburlaine Must Die won the Crime Writers'
Association Creasey Dagger Award in 2002. She is currently living in
Germany.
Ben Wilson - The history graduate has published two
non-fiction books, The Laughter Of Triumph and Decency And Disorder.
He also worked as a researcher and writer on David Starkey's TV
series Monarchy. He lives in Buckinghamshire.
Robyn Young - Young ran a nightclub and worked in a
building society before publishing historical novel Brethren, the
first in a trilogy. The second instalment, Crusade, is out later
this year. She lives in Brighton.
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