Sneha Girap (Editor)

Tibor Fischer

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Tibor Fischer

Role
  
Novelist


Nominations
  
Man Booker Prize

Tibor Fischer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Books
  
Under the Frog, The Thought Gang, The Collector Collector, Good to be God, Don't read this book if you're stu

Education
  
University of Cambridge

Sls lithuania 2014 tibor fischer reading part 1


Tibor Fischer (born 15 November 1959) is a British novelist and short story writer. In 1993, he was selected by the influential literary magazine Granta as one of the 20 best young British writers and his novel Under the Frog featured on the Booker Prize shortlist.

Contents

Tibor Fischer Bookthrift A blog about books Book of the Month Good to

Tibor fischer speaking to matt thorne


Life and career

Tibor Fischer Tibor Fischer

Fischer was born in Stockport, England. His parents were Hungarian basketball players, who fled Hungary in 1956. He studied French and Latin at Peterhouse, Cambridge. The bloody 1956 revolution, and his father's background, informed Fischer's debut novel Under the Frog, a Rabelaisian yarn about a Hungarian basketball player surviving Communism. The title is derived from a Hungarian saying, that the worst possible place to be is under a frog's arse down a coal mine.

Tibor Fischer Outside of the ordinary with Tibor Fischer Metro News

In 1992, Under the Frog won a Betty Trask Prize for literature, and was the first debut novel to be shortlisted for the Booker prize.

Tibor Fischer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Fischer's subsequent novels have often featured dysfunctional central characters who eventually manage to achieve some kind of redemption. They include The Thought Gang, about a delinquent and alcoholic philosophy professor who hooks up with a failed one-armed bandit in France to form a successful team of bank robbers, and The Collector Collector, about a weekend in South London, narrated by a 5000-year-old Sumerian pot.

Fischer's novel, Voyage to the End of the Room was published in 2003, and concerned an agoraphobic ex-dancer.

His next novel, Good to be God was published by Alma Books on 4 September 2008. In it a broke, unemployed habitual failure uses his friend's credit card to start a new life in Florida, and decides that the fastest way to make a fortune would be to become a deity.

Fischer has also published a book of short stories, Don't Read This Book If You're Stupid (published in the U.S. as I Like Being Killed: Stories).

In 2009 Fischer became the Royal Literary Fund writing fellow at City and Guilds of London Art School.

Fischer is represented by Louise Greenberg Books Ltd.

Recently, he has involved himself in the ongoing political debates in Hungary. Thanks to an opinion piece that appeared in The Guardian on 21 April 2017, he is generally viewed as an apologist for Viktor Orbán, Hungary's avowedly illiberal prime minister.

References

Tibor Fischer Wikipedia