词条 | Andrew Martin (novelist) |
释义 |
| name = Andrew Martin | image = Andrew Martin.jpg | caption = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1962|7|6}} | birth_place =York, England | death_date = | death_place = | occupation = Novelist | genre = Crime Fiction | movement = | notableworks = Jim Stringer, Steam Detective| influences = | influenced = | website = {{URL|jimstringernovels.com/}} }} Andrew Martin (born 6 July 1962) is an English novelist and journalist. Martin was brought up in Yorkshire, studied at Merton College, Oxford and qualified as a barrister.[1] He has since worked as a freelance journalist for a number of publications while writing novels, starting with Bilton, a comic novel about journalists, and The Bobby Dazzlers, a comic novel set in the North of England, for which he was named Spectator Young Writer of the Year. The Guardian claimed Bilton and The Bobby Dazzlers "rank high in the lists of the best comic novels published in the past 10 years".[2]His series of detective novels about Jim Stringer, a railwayman reassigned to the North Eastern Railway police in Edwardian England, includes The Necropolis Railway (set on the real London Necropolis Railway), The Blackpool Highflyer, The Lost Luggage Porter, Murder at Deviation Junction, Death on a Branch Line, The Last Train to Scarborough, The Somme Stations (Winner of the CWA Ellis Peters Historical Award 2011) and The Baghdad Railway Club.[3] In 2015, he released The Yellow Diamond, A Crime of the Super-Rich, a detective novel set in London's Mayfair. In summer 2017, he released 'Soot' an acclaimed crime novel set in 18th century York. He has also written a number of works of non-fiction. Railway-related titles include Underground Overground, A Passenger's History of the Tube; Belles and Whistles, Five Journeys Through Time on Britain's Trains and Night Trains, The Rise and Fall of the Sleeper. Other non-fiction works include How to Get Things Really Flat; Ghoul Britannia and Flight by Elephant about Gyles Mackrell and his Burmese, elephant-assisted wartime rescue mission, published in 2013. In addition, he is the editor of a dictionary of humorous quotations: Funny You Should Say That: A Compendium of Jokes, Quips and Quotations from Cicero to the Simpsons. His works for television and radio include: Between the Lines, Railways in Fiction and Film (2008), Disappearing Dad, Fathers in Literature (2010), The Trains that Time Forgot: Britain's Lost Railway Journeys (2015), all in the Timeshift series, and three essay series for Radio 3, The Sound and The Fury (2013), England Ejects (2014), The Further Realm (2015). Andrew Martin lives in north London with his wife and sons. Bibliography
References1. ^http://www.jimstringernovels.com/home 2. ^1 {{cite news|last=Marchant|first=Ian|title=Oysters and Bass|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/sep/11/featuresreviews.guardianreview15|accessdate=10 January 2014|newspaper=The Guardian|date=11 September 2004}} 3. ^{{cite web|title=Andrew Martin home page|url=http://www.jimstringernovels.com|accessdate=23 July 2015}} 4. ^{{cite news|last=Fort|first=Tom|title=Underground Overground by Andrew Martin: review|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/historybookreviews/9229715/Underground-Overground-by-Andrew-Martin-review.html|accessdate=10 January 2014|newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|date=1 May 2012}} 5. ^{{cite web|last=Self|first=Will|title=Underground, Overground by Andrew Martin – review|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/may/24/underground-overground-andrew-martin-review|work=The Guardian|accessdate=10 January 2014|authorlink=Will Self|date=24 May 2012}} External links
10 : 1962 births|Living people|21st-century English novelists|English crime fiction writers|English editors|English male journalists|Alumni of Merton College, Oxford|People from York|English male novelists|21st-century British male writers |
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