John Lawton (author)
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| John Lawton | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1947 Booterstown, Dublin |
| Pen name | John Lawton |
| Occupation | Novelist |
| Writing period | 1987-present |
| Genres | Espionage, Crime |
| Notable work(s) | Novel: Old Flames (1996), Novel: Second Violin (2007) |
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John Lawton is an author of crime/espionage stories primarily set in England during the Cold War].
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[edit] Biography
Born in Dublin in 1947, Lawton began his working life as a housepainter and gardener in the early 1960s. Settling in England he had a brief and unspectacular career in London publishing and by the mid 1980s was a documentary producer at the newly-created Channel 4. In 1993 he settled in New York, and in 1995 won a WH Smith award for his third book Black Out[1]. He went back into television in England in 1997, and by 1999 had dropped off the TV and books map completely. He returned in 2001 with Riptide, which was snapped up by Columbia Pictures. For most of the 21st century, so far, he has tended to be elusive and itinerant, residing in England, the USA and Italy. He last appeared in New York, in 2008, with a reading in Greenwich Village.[2] Earlier the same year he was named in the Daily Telegraph (London) as one of '50 Crime Writers To Read Before You Die.'
Many of the Biography pages within Lawton's books have a decidedly tongue-in-cheek bent with hobbies listed as the cultivation of the onion and obscure varieties of potato, growing leeks.[3] His residence on the Penguin Books website is listed as high up in the English hills, but spends part of the year in New York City and pretends it is balance. He is reputed to be reclusive, rarely giving interviews. The name is a pseudonym and the photograph on publishers' websites is believed to be his younger brother William.
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Frederick Troy Novels
The novels within the Frederick Troy series revolve around the life of the resilient protagonist Frederick (Freddie) Troy, the son of a Russian immigrant father and a detective for Scotland Yard. The rights to this character were purchased by Columbia Pictures.
- Black Out (1995)
- Old Flames (1996)
- A Little White Death (1998)
- Riptide (2001) - Published in the United States as Bluffing Mr. Churchill
- Blue Rondo (2005) - Published in the United States as Flesh Wounds
- Second Violin (2007)
[edit] Other Novels
- Sweet Sunday (2002)
[edit] Non-Fiction
- "1963" (1992)
[edit] Critical Work
- Selected Poems of DH Lawrence (Everyman)
- The Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad (Everyman)
- England My England by DH Lawrence (Everyman)
- The Sleeper Awakes by HG Wells (Everyman)
- The Time Machine by HG Wells : Centennial edition (Everyman)
[edit] Television
- A Walk up 5th Avenue
- Christians in Palestine
- Free and Fair
- 25th Anniversary of the Mersey Poets (with Brian Patten)
- Green Thoughts (with Gore Vidal)
- O Superman (with Harold Pinter)
[edit] References
- The spy novelist whose spies are crooks CNN.com
- www.nytimes.com/2006/02/19
- The Spectator 23.08.2003
[edit] Sources
- 1. WH Smith Fresh Talent press release 1995
- 2. Grove Atlantic press release 2008
- 3. Weidenfeld and Nicolson press release 1998
[edit] External links
- Profile at Fantastic Fiction
- Profile at Orion Books
- The Books of John Lawton – The “Troy” series at IT'S A CRIME! (OR A MYSTERY...)
- John Lawton and the English past at Grumpy Old Bookman
- Author site from his US publisher that includes an author bio, excerpts from the novels, an author essay on Second Violin and a Q&A section with the author.

