Jon Courtenay Grimwood | |
---|---|
Born | 1953 Valletta, Malta |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | British |
Period | 1990s–present |
Genre | Science fiction, fantasy, literary fiction & thrillers |
Website | |
j-cg |
Jon Courtenay Grimwood (born 1953 in Valletta, Malta) is a Maltese born British science fiction and fantasy author. He also writes literary fiction as Jonathan Grimwood, and crime fiction and thrillers as Jack Grimwood.
Grimwood was born in Valletta, Malta, grew up in Malta, Britain, Southeast Asia and Norway in the 1960s and 1970s. He studied at Kingston University, then worked in publishing and as a freelance writer for magazines and newspapers including The Guardian , The Daily Telegraph , The Times , and The Independent . Now writing a memoir and studying for a PhD at the University of St Andrews, he lives in Edinburgh and is married to the journalist and novelist Sam Baker, with a son, Jamie, from a previous marriage.
Much of his early work within SF&F has been described as post-cyberpunk. [1] [2] He won a British Science Fiction Association award for Felaheen in 2003, [3] was short-listed for the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Pashazade the year before, [4] and won the 2006 BSFA award for Best Novel with End of the World Blues. [5] He was short-listed for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award in 2002 for Pashazade. [4] His fourth book is loosely based on Stanley Weyman's Victorian novel Under the Red Robe . End of the World Blues was also short-listed for the 2007 Arthur C. Clarke Award. [6] The following were nominated in the SF novel category in the Locus Awards – Felaheen, The Third Arabesk (2004); Stamping Butterflies (2005); 9Tail Fox (2006); End of the World Blues (2007).
The French translation of his 2013 literary novel The Last Banquet , written as Jonathan Grimwood, was shortlisted in January 2015 for Le Prix Montesquieu , [7] as Le Dernier Banquet , 2014, Éditions Terra Nova, translation by Carole Delporte.
Grimwood's SF&F work tends to be of a quasi-alternate history genre. In the first four novels, set in the 22nd century, the point of divergence is the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, where Grimwood posits a reality where Napoleon III's France defeats Otto von Bismarck's Prussia, causing the German Empire never to form and the Second French Empire never to collapse. In the Arabesk trilogy, the point of divergence is in 1915, with Woodrow Wilson brokering an earlier peace so that World War I barely expanded outside of the Balkans; the books are set in a liberal Islamic Ottoman North Africa in the 21st century, mainly centring on El Iskandriya (Alexandria). By contrast, there is little in Stamping Butterflies, 9tail Fox or End of the World Blues to suggest that the books are not set in our reality.
The Fallen Blade is the first of three novels set in an alternative early-15th century featuring Tycho, fallen angel and assassin, at the Venetian court, in a Venice where Marco Polo's family have been hereditary dukes for five generations and the Mongol emperor Tamberlaine has conquered China, making him the most powerful ruler in the world. The second novel in the Assassini series, The Outcast Blade was published in 2012, with the third The Exiled Blade published 2013. The novels take as a template sequences and tropes from Shakespeare's plays Othello , Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet . The novels have been sold into a number of languages.
His first literary novel, The Last Banquet, as Jonathan Grimwood, was published in 2013 by Canongate Booksin the UK, Europa Editions in the US, and Éditions Terra Nova in France, among others. Referencing Benjamin Franklin, Voltaire and the Marquis de Sade — and picaresque in the style of Candide — it tells the semi magic realist tale of an aristocrat prepared to eat anything, and covers the run up to the French Revolution from the early to late 18th century. The French France 5 critic Gérard Collard called Le Dernier Banquet "le livre de l’année" (the book of the year). [8] It was an NPR Best Book of the Year for 2013 [9] 'Foodies and Francophiles alike will relish this debut novel about Jean-Marie d'Aumout, whom we first meet crunching beetles as a starving orphaned son of nobility in 1723...’ [9] In January 2015, it was shortlisted for Le Prix Montesquieu. The book was also nominated for the Bad Sex Awards for a scene involving Brie and breast milk.
As Jack Grimwood, he is writing thrillers for Penguin Books. The first, Moskva, Spring 2016, is set in 1980s Soviet Moscow. The second, Nightfall Berlin was published in May 2018.
2021’s Island Reich, the first stand-alone novel written as Jack Grimwood, mixes the story of the fictional safe cracker and conman Bill O’Hagan, with the Battle of France in June 1940, the German occupation of the Channel Islands, the Duke of Windsor’s exile in Portugal and Operation Willi, the supposed Nazi plot to kidnap the duke and return him to the British throne as a puppet monarch.
Midnight Sun, the third Tom Fox novel, is due Summer 2023.
Grimwood was guest of honour at Novacon in 2003, at Kontext (in Uppsala, Sweden) in 2008, at Eastercon LX (the 60th British National Science Fiction Convention) in 2009, and at Bristolcon in 2014.
He was a judge for the 2010 Arthur C Clarke Award presented to China Miéville for The City & the City ; and for the 2011 award presented to Lauren Beukes for Zoo City . He also judged The James White Award given at Eastercon 2012.
Name | Published | ISBN | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
neoAddix | 1997 | ISBN 0-340-67472-5 | |
Lucifer's Dragon | 1998 | ISBN 0-7434-7827-4 | |
reMix | 1999 | ISBN 0-671-02222-9 | |
redRobe | 2000 | ISBN 0-671-02260-1 | British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2000 [10] |
Pashazade | 2001 | ISBN 0-7434-6833-3 | First in the Arabesk trilogy British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2001; [11] John W. Campbell Memorial Award nominee, 2002; [4] Arthur C. Clarke Award shortlisted, 2002 [4] |
Effendi | 2002 | ISBN 0-671-77369-0 | Second in the Arabesk trilogy British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2002 [4] |
Felaheen | 2003 | ISBN 0-671-77370-4 | Third in the Arabesk trilogy British Science Fiction Award winner, 2003; [3] British Fantasy Award nominee, 2004 [12] |
Stamping Butterflies | 2004 | ISBN 0-575-07613-5 | British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2004 [12] |
9tail Fox | 2005 | ISBN 0-575-07615-1 | British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2005 [13] Best Novel, Vector 2006 |
End of the World Blues | 2006 | ISBN 0-575-07616-X | British Science Fiction Award winner, 2006; [5] Arthur C. Clarke Award shortlisted, 2007 [6] |
The Fallen Blade | 2011 | ISBN 0-316-07439-X | First in the Assassini trilogy |
The Outcast Blade | 2012 | ISBN 1841498475 | Second in the Assassini trilogy |
The Exiled Blade | 2013 | ISBN 9781841498508 | Third in the Assassini trilogy |
The Last Banquet | 2013 | ISBN 1-4448-2021-4 | As Jonathan Grimwood shortlisted for Le Prix Montesquieu. 2015 |
Moskva | 2016 | ISBN 0-7181-8155-7 | As Jack Grimwood |
Nightfall Berlin | 2018 | ISBN 978-0-7181-8157-4 | As Jack Grimwood |
Island Reich | 2021 | ISBN 978-0-2413-4831-4 | As Jack Grimwood |
Arctic Sun | 2023 | ISBN 978-0-2413-4833-8 | As Jack Grimwood |
Dan Simmons is an American science fiction and horror writer. He is the author of the Hyperion Cantos and the Ilium/Olympos cycles, among other works that span the science fiction, horror, and fantasy genres, sometimes within a single novel. Simmons's genre-intermingling Song of Kali (1985) won the World Fantasy Award. He also writes mysteries and thrillers, some of which feature the continuing character Joe Kurtz.
Kenneth Macrae MacLeod is a Scottish science fiction writer. His novels The Sky Road and The Night Sessions won the BSFA Award. MacLeod's novels have been nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke, Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and Campbell Memorial awards for best novel on multiple occasions.
Paul J. McAuley is a British botanist and science fiction author. A biologist by training, McAuley writes mostly hard science fiction. His novels dealing with themes such as biotechnology, alternative history/alternative reality, and space travel.
Timothy Thomas Powers is an American science fiction and fantasy author. His first major novel was The Drawing of the Dark (1979), but the novel that earned him wide praise was The Anubis Gates (1983), which won the Philip K. Dick Award, and has since been published in many other languages. His other written work include Dinner at Deviant's Palace (1985), Last Call (1992), Expiration Date (1996), Earthquake Weather (1997), Declare (2000), and Three Days to Never (2006). Powers has won the World Fantasy Award twice for his critically acclaimed novels Last Call and Declare. His 1987 novel On Stranger Tides served as inspiration for the Monkey Island franchise of video games and was partly adapted into the fourth Pirates of the Caribbean film.
Vernor Steffen Vinge was an American science fiction author and professor. He taught mathematics and computer science at San Diego State University. He was the first wide-scale popularizer of the technological singularity concept and among the first authors to present a fictional "cyberspace". He won the Hugo Award for his novels A Fire Upon the Deep (1992), A Deepness in the Sky (1999), and Rainbows End (2006), and novellas Fast Times at Fairmont High (2001) and The Cookie Monster (2004).
Gregory Dale Bear was an American science fiction writer. His work covered themes of galactic conflict, parallel universes, consciousness and cultural practices, and accelerated evolution. His last work was the 2021 novel The Unfinished Land. Greg Bear wrote over 50 books in total.
Joe William Haldeman is an American science fiction author.
Robert Charles Wilson is an American-Canadian science fiction author.
Robert James Sawyer is a Canadian and American science fiction writer. He has had 25 novels published and his short fiction has appeared in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Amazing Stories, On Spec, Nature, and numerous anthologies. He has won many writing awards, including the best-novel Nebula Award (1995), the best-novel Hugo Award (2003), the John W. Campbell Memorial Award (2006), the Robert A. Heinlein Award (2017), and more Aurora Awards than anyone else in history.
Constance Elaine Trimmer Willis, commonly known as Connie Willis, is an American science fiction and fantasy writer. She has won eleven Hugo Awards and seven Nebula Awards for particular works—more major SF awards than any other writer—most recently the "Best Novel" Hugo and Nebula Awards for Blackout/All Clear (2010). She was inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2009 and the Science Fiction Writers of America named her its 28th SFWA Grand Master in 2011.
Christopher Mackenzie Priest was a British novelist and science fiction writer. His works include Fugue for a Darkening Island (1972), The Inverted World (1974), The Affirmation (1981), The Glamour (1984), The Prestige (1995), and The Separation (2002).
Michael Lawson Bishop was an American author. Over five decades and in more than thirty books, he created what has been called a "body of work that stands among the most admired and influential in modern science fiction and fantasy literature."
Jonathan Samuel Carroll is an American fiction writer primarily known for novels that may be labelled magic realism, slipstream or contemporary fantasy. He has lived in Austria since 1974.
The Arabesk trilogy is a sequence of alternate history novels by the British author Jon Courtenay Grimwood.
Air, also known as Air: Or, Have Not Have, is a 2005 novel by Geoff Ryman. It won the British Science Fiction Association Award, the James Tiptree, Jr. Award, and the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and was on the short list for the Philip K. Dick Award in 2004, the Nebula Award in 2005, and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award in 2006.
American writer C. J. Cherryh's career began with publication of her first books in 1976, Gate of Ivrel and Brothers of Earth. She has been a prolific science fiction and fantasy author since then, publishing over 80 novels, short-story compilations, with continuing production as her blog attests. Cherryh has received the Hugo and Locus Awards for some of her novels.
Pyr was the science fiction and fantasy imprint of Prometheus Books, launched in March 2005 with the publication of John Meaney's Paradox. In November 2018 it was sold to Start Publishing.
The James White Award is an annual short story competition open to writers from around the world. It was established in 2000 to commemorate the life and work of the Irish science fiction author James White. The competition was created to encourage new writers and is not open to professional authors. "Professional author" is defined as one who is eligible for active membership of the Science Fiction Writers of America – that is, a writer with three short story sales to qualifying markets or one novel sale to a qualifying market. Entries must be 6,000 words or less and written in English. The winning story receives a cash prize and publication in Interzone magazine. The award is sponsored by Interzone and the British Science Fiction Association, which took over the administration of the award in 2010.
The Light Ages is a steampunk and alternate history fantasy novel by Ian R. MacLeod. The novel is set in an alternate Victorian England during an Industrial Revolution fueled by a dangerous magical substance known as aether.
Jon Courtenay Grimwood is the author of post-cyberpunk science fiction novels that seamlessly integrate vivid settings, startling characters and political savvy.