Tripti Joshi (Editor)

James Meek (author)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
James Meek

Role
  
Novelist


James Meek (author) versobooksprods3amazonawscomimages000005994

Books
  
The Heart Broke In, The People's Act of Love, Private Island: Why Britain No, We Are Now Beginnin, The Museum of Doubt

Education
  
University of Edinburgh

James meek on private britain


James Meek (born 1962) is a British novelist and journalist, author of The People's Act of Love. He was born in London, England, and grew up in Dundee, Scotland.

Contents

James meek robin hood in a time of austerity


Biography

James Meek (author) James Meek The war reporter fumbles toward a romance in the rubble

Meek attended school at Grove Academy in Broughty Ferry, Dundee, and studied at Edinburgh University. His first short stories were published in the New Edinburgh Review and he collaborated with Duncan McLean on a play, Faculty of Rats, which starred Angus Macfadyen.

James Meek (author) James Meek Literature

After a few years in England Meek returned to Edinburgh in 1988, where he worked for The Scotsman. The following year, his first novel, McFarlane Boils the Sea, was published. In 1990 he helped McLean set up the garage publishing house Clocktower Press.

James Meek (author) James Meek YouTube

In 1991 Meek moved to Kiev and in 1994 to Moscow. He joined the staff of The Guardian, becoming its Moscow bureau chief. In 1999 he moved to London. He left the Guardian in 2005. He is the author of five novels, two books of short stories and a book of essays about privatisation. He is a contributing editor to The London Review of Books.

Fiction

James Meek (author) JohnnyDeppReadsInterviews James Meek author THE PEOPLES ACT OF LOVE

In the 1990s and early 2000s Meek was associated with the emerging experimental realist school of Scottish writers, including Irvine Welsh and Alan Warner, appearing with them on the pages of the Kevin Williamson-edited short story collection Children of Albion Rovers. His fiction during this time – two novels and two books of short stories – was characterised by surrealism and absurdism and influenced by writers such as Franz Kafka and James Kelman. Meek has described it as 'magical dirty realism'.

James Meek (author) James Meek interviewed by Louise Doughty for Fiction Uncovered 2013

Meek’s third novel, The People’s Act of Love, published in 2005, brought him critical acclaim and a wider audience. It was translated into more than twenty languages and earned a number of awards and a nomination for the Booker Prize. Newsweek magazine named it one of the top ten works of fiction of the 2000s. Johnny Depp optioned the book for a film adaptation.

The People's Act of Love, about a woman and her three lovers in a small Siberian town during the Russian Civil War, was followed by We Are Now Beginning Our Descent (2008), the story of a journalist who travels to Afghanistan immediately after 9/11, and The Heart Broke In (2012), set in contemporary Britain, where a newspaper editor blackmails a TV producer into betraying his sister.

Journalism

Besides reporting on Britain and the former Soviet Union Meek covered the military conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq after 9/11. In 2003 he crossed the border from Kuwait into Iraq, following the invading American armies to Baghdad in a small group of journalists that included Dexter Filkins.

In 2014 Meek published Private Island, a collection of essays, mainly from the London Review of Books, about the privatisation of Britain.

Awards and honours: Fiction

  • 2005 Scottish Arts Council Book of Year Award, The People's Act of Love
  • 2005 Ondaatje Prize, The People’s Act of Love
  • 2005 Booker Prize, long list, The People's Act of Love
  • 2008 Le Prince Maurice Prize, We Are Now Beginning Our Descent
  • 2012 Costa Book Award, shortlist, The Heart Broke In
  • Awards and honours: Non-fiction

  • 2002 Reuters-IUCN Media Award
  • 2003 British Press Awards Foreign Reporter of the Year
  • 2004 Amnesty International Journalist of the Year
  • 2015 Orwell Prize
  • Translations

    Czech

  • Sibiřské drama: syrový milostný příběh z období ruské revoluce, 2006, ISBN 80-7217-446-0
  • Danish

  • I kærlighedens navn, 2005, ISBN 87-91746-01-9
  • Dutch

  • Uit liefde van het volk
  • Het hart viel binnen, 2013
  • French

  • Nous commençons notre descente, translation David Fauquemberg, Métaillé 2008 ISBN 978-2-86424-657-2
  • Un acte d'amour, translation David Fauquemberg, Métaillé 2007 ISBN 978-2-86424-607-7
  • Thé à l'eau de mer (McFarlane Boils the Sea), translation Fanchita Gonzalez Battle, Autrement, 1997 ISBN 978-2-86260-703-0
  • German

  • Die einsamen Schrecken der Liebe, 2005, ISBN 3-426-19710-3
  • Liebe und andere Parasiten, 2013, ISBN 978-3421045867
  • Hungarian

  • A szeretet hírmondói, 2008, ISBN 978-963-87565-8-9
  • Italian

  • Per amore del popolo, 2005, ISBN 88-304-2267-3
  • Norwegian

  • Kjærlighetens utposter, 2007
  • Portuguese

  • O Acto de Amor do Povo, 2006
  • Romanian

  • Un gest de iubire, 2007, ISBN 978-973-50-1765-1
  • Serbian

  • Narodna deklaracija ljubavi, 2007
  • Spanish

  • Por amor al pueblo
  • Swedish

  • Den yttersta kärlekens gulag, 2006
  • References

    James Meek (author) Wikipedia