Matthew Kneale
Matthew Kneale (born 24 November 1960) is a British writer, best known for his 2000 novel English Passengers.
Life
Kneale was born in London, the son of screenwriter Nigel Kneale,[1] and the children's writer Judith Kerr. He was brought up in Barnes, attended Latymer Upper School in West London, and then studied modern history at Magdalen College, Oxford. Growing up, he was fascinated by other cultures, past and present, and as a student he travelled in Europe, South America, Central America and the Indian subcontinent. After graduating he knew he wanted to write but had little idea how to set about such a thing. He traveled to Tokyo, where he found work teaching English and began writing a diary and short stories. Later, on returning to England, his experience in Japan inspired his first novel, Whore Banquets.
During the next few years Kneale lived primarily in London, travelled, spent a year in Rome, and wrote his second novel, Inside Rose's Kingdom. In 1990 he moved to Oxford, where he wrote two historical novels, Sweet Thames and English Passengers. He also developed an interest in languages, attempting to learn Spanish, Romanian, Albanian and Amharic (Ethiopian). In 2000 he married Shannon Russell and they moved to Italy and Shannon's homeland of Canada. He and his wife now live in Rome with their two children.[2]
Work
Kneale's first novel, Whore Banquets tells the story of an Englishman whose affair with a Tokyo woman brings him into the realm of Japanese organized crime. It won the 1988 Somerset Maugham Award[3] and the 1988 Betty Trask Award.[4] It was later republished as Mr Foreigner.
Inside Rose's Kingdom follows a young innocent who moves from the countryside to London, where he becomes caught up with a group of controlling, emotionally grasping people.
Sweet Thames is set in London in 1849 and tells the story of the trials of an enlightened drainage engineer whose wife vanishes during a cholera epidemic. It won the 1993 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize.
English Passengers tells the story of a religious-scientific expedition that seeks to find the Garden of Eden in Tasmania, a land whose aboriginal culture had been experiencing brutal destruction at the hands of British settlers and convicts. The novel is told by more than 20 voices. It won the 2000 Whitbread Book of the Year Award and was a finalist for the Booker Prize and the Australian Miles Franklin Award. In translation the book won France's Relay Prix d'Evasion. Interviewed in 2001, Kneale said that J. G. Farrell was a writer whom he particularly admired, as one who "wrote about the British Empire - and scathingly - back in the 1970s, when few in Britain wanted to think about the uglier parts of their country's past."[5]
Small Crimes in an Age of Abundance is a volume of 12 short stories set around the world, from Colombia to London to Africa. They examine the lives of people as they struggled to survive and do the right thing, sometimes managing neither. One of the stories, "Powder", about a failed lawyer whose life changes when he chances upon a stash of cocaine and a mobile phone, was made into the French feature film, Une Pure Affaire.
When We Were Romans is told from the point of view of a boy, Laurence, whose mother suddenly and unexpectedly decides that she and her children, and even Laurence’s hamster, must flee England to Rome, where she lived many years before.
An Atheist's History of Belief is Kneale's first nonfiction book. It looks at the beliefs that people have devised to explain their world, from earliest prehistoric times to the present, as understood by a fascinated non-believer.
Works
Fiction
- Whore Banquets, 1987
- Inside Rose's Kingdom, 1989
- Sweet Thames, 1992
- English Passengers, 2000
- Small Crimes in an Age of Abundance, 2005
- Powder, 2006
- When We Were Romans, 2007
Non-fiction
- An Atheist's History of Belief, 2013
References
- ↑ Author interview in The Compulsive Reader, 18 March 2003. Retrieved 14 November 2013.
- ↑ Penguin publishers site. 14 November 2013.
- ↑ "Somerset Maugham Award". www.librarything.com. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
- ↑ "Betty Trask Award". www.librarything.com. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
- ↑ Interview by Sinéad Gleeson Retrieved 14 November 2013.
External links
- Official website
- Matthew Kneale at British Council: Literature
- How religion accidentally inspired some of our greatest technological breakthroughs
- Pope Francis's drive to cleanse the Catholic Church