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Malcolm Knox (author)

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Nationality
  
Australian

Name
  
Malcolm Knox

Role
  
Journalist


Malcolm Knox (author) wwwpenguincomauextrascontributors0000006999png

Occupation
  
Journalist, Author, Novelist

Genre
  
Literature, non-fiction, essay

Books
  
The Life, A Private Man, Jamaica

Malcolm Knox (born 1966), is an Australian journalist and author.

Contents

Malcolm Knox (author) httpscdnpenguincomauauthorsoriginal63491a

Life and literary career

Malcolm Knox grew up in Sydney and studied in Sydney and Scotland. He has held a number of positions at the Sydney Morning Herald including chief cricket correspondent (1996–99), assistant sport editor (1999–2000) and literary editor (2002–06). As literary editor, he broke the story of the fake Jordanian memoirist, Norma Khouri, which won him a Walkley Award (Investigative Journalism category) in 2004 (together with Caroline Overington).

He has written nineteen books including five novels.

Awards and nominations

  • Named one of the Sydney Morning Herald's Best Young Australian novelists (2001)
  • A Private Man, was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Book Prize and the Tasmanian Premier's Award.
  • Walkley Award (Investigative Journalism category) in 2004 (together with Caroline Overington) for the exposé of fraudulent author Norma Khouri (author of Forbidden Love).
  • He was runner up for Graham Perkin Australian Journalist of the Year Award 2004.
  • Winner of a Ned Kelly Award (2005) Best First Fiction for A Private Man
  • Secrets of the Jury Room won an Alex Buzo prize for research
  • Walkley Award (2007) for Magazine Feature Writing for essay 'Cruising: Life and Death on the High Seas' was published in the September 2006 issue of The Monthly.
  • Winner of the Colin Roderick Award (2008) for Jamaica (best book published in Australia in the preceding year dealing with an aspect of Australian life)
  • Winner of the Ashurst Business Literature Prize (2014) for Boom
  • References

    Malcolm Knox (author) Wikipedia