Life peerage awarded to Dame Sue Black

We are thrilled to congratulate our client Professor Dame Sue Black on being awarded a life peerage.  She is one of the world’s foremost anatomists and forensic anthropologists, whose work has been recognised internationally, particularly in the fields of war crimes investigations, mass fatality incidents and forensic casework. 

Her nomination as a crossbench peer was announced in February and she was introduced to the House of Lords on May 17th. 

Baroness Black of Strome is the Pro Vice-Chancellor for Engagement at Lancaster University, after thirteen years as Professor of Anatomy and Forensic Anthropology at Dundee University, and she is President of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 

She has authored many specialist academic works and textbooks, and for the general reader her books All That Remains: A Life in Death (2018) and Written in Bone: Hidden Stories in What We Leave Behind (2020) have been published across the world in many languages, and to universal acclaim.

RJ Barker’s Forsaken Trilogy goes to Orbit

RJ Barker profile pic (c) David Bowman, 2018.jpg

Orbit has acquired a new trilogy from the British Fantasy Society Award-winning RJ Barker.

Ed Wilson at Johnson and Alcock sold World English rights to Senior Commissioning Editor Jenni Hill at Orbit UK, who will publish alongside sister imprint Orbit US in a co-ordinated global release in 2022.

RJ Barker lives in Leeds with his wife, son and ‘a collection of questionable taxidermy’. He debuted in 2017 with the fantasy novel Age of Assassins, the start of a trilogy which was shortlisted for the Gemmell Awards, the Kitschie Awards, The Compton Crook and the British Fantasy Society’s Best Debut.

The Bone Ships began a new series set on the high seas, and won the British Fantasy Society Award for Best Fantasy Novel, aka the Robert Holdstock Award, this year.

RJ will set his new tale within the bounds of a forest straight out of darkest folklore – with outlaws fighting an evil empire and warring deities.

Acquiring editor Jenni Hill said: ‘RJ’s style is inimitable and wonderful – more and more readers are discovering him every day, and they’re going to love the story he’s telling in the Forsaken series, which is bigger and darker and more feral than anything he’s told before.’

Ed Wilson said: ‘RJ has already taken us from the Sour Lands to the High Seas, and now we’re heading into the Woods. His writing is brave and unexpected, and there is nobody in UK fantasy pushing more boundaries. After his well-deserved BFS win, nothing can hold him back. Although we might have to confiscate his PS4.’

RJ said: ‘I've loved working with Orbit on both the Wounded Kingdom series and the Tide Child series and they've been hugely encouraging in what I do, so I can't wait to venture into the dark forests with them on this new series of books.’

For more information contact Orbit’s Senior Press Officer Nazia.Khatun@littlebrown.co.uk

About Orbit UK: Orbit is the science fiction and fantasy imprint of Little, Brown Book Group. Launched in 1974, it is one of the leading SFF imprints in the UK. Orbit UK authors include Sunday Times and international bestsellers James S. A. Corey, N. K. Jemisin, Robert Jordan, Iain M. Banks, Terry Brooks, Jim Butcher, Trudi Canavan, M. R. Carey, Ann Leckie, Anthony Ryan and Brent Weeks.

HQ sign Nilopar Uddin's debut novel

HQ has signed The Halfways, a “very special” debut family drama from Nilopar Uddin.

Publishing director Manpreet Grewal acquired world all-language rights from Anna Power at Johnson & Alcock in a two-book deal. The Halfways will be published in hardback, trade paperback, e-book and audio in summer 2022.

Its synopsis states: “The Halfways is an epic family drama about two sisters, Nasrin and Sabrina. When their father Shamsur suddenly dies, they rush to be with their mother at the family home and restaurant in Wales, but reluctantly step back into the stifling world of their childhood. When Shamsur’s will is read to the gathered family, a devastating secret is revealed that profoundly changes the lives and identities of the sisters, and creates an irreparable family rift. Moving between London, Wales, New York and Bangladesh, this sweeping novel spans over four decades.”

Uddin was born in Shropshire to Sylheti parents, who like the fictional family in The Halfways, owned and ran an Indian restaurant in Wales. She has had a successful career as a financial services lawyer, practising in both London and New York. She now lives in London and has an MA in creative writing from City University, where she first started working on The Halfways.

She said: “I'm so delighted to be working with the HQ team on the publication of The Halfways. I've been overwhelmed by Manpreet's enthusiasm for these characters, who have lived with me for the last six years, and am very excited to have the opportunity to work with her. I'm also extremely grateful to my agent, Anna, for her unwavering support and encouragement. Publishing The Halfways is a dream come true.”

Grewal added: “In equal parts compelling, harrowing, multi-layered and beautiful, The Halfways is that rarest of novels. It’s everything I love in a big story about family, and more. A story of mothers and daughters, of fathers and daughters, of sisterhood, it is a tale that explores belonging, family and what makes forgiveness and redemption possible. I defy anyone not to be moved by these characters and the rich stories they have to tell. I was completely blown away by Nilopar’s talent, and this is going to be a very special publication for HQ.”

FAWLEY SERIES ACQUIRED FOR TELEVISION

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Screen rights to Cara Hunter’s DI Fawley novels have been optioned by Castlefield, part of Fremantle, by the team behind BAFTA-winning In The Flesh and BBC One crime series In The Dark.

Hunter's four-book series is the biggest crime-writing brand to have launched in the UK in the last five years, selling over one million copies to date in the UK and across 25 territories worldwide. Her debut novel Close to Home topped The Sunday Times and Amazon bestseller lists and was Penguin Random House’s biggest selling eBook of 2018.

Castlefield Managing Director Hilary Martin and Creative Director Simon Judd said: “We are so thrilled to be joining forces with the brilliantly talented Cara Hunter to bring her hit novels to screen. Cara collides noisy, epic crime stories with vivid, visceral characters that you just can’t look away from. Her razor-sharp depiction of contemporary life is a gift and we can’t wait to get cracking.”

Cara Hunter, whose fifth novel The Whole Truth will be published in early 2021, said “I’ve always ‘seen’ the Fawley books play out in my head as I write them, and the style I developed for the books was a deliberate attempt to replicate the feel and pace of the best TV crime – the short scenes, the fast pace, and the changing points of view. Hilary and Simon completely ‘get’ what the books are all about, and have a wonderful feel for the characters. I can’t think of a better producer for the series than Castlefield.”

Viking buys McKay's history of the Allied bombing of Dresden

Viking has bought a narrative history of the Allied bombing of Dresden by bestselling historian Sinclair McKay.

Daniel Crewe bought World English rights from Anna Power at Johnson & Alcock.

Scheduled for publication on the 75th anniversary of the bombing, Dresden will provide a minute-by-minute account of the Allied obliteration of Dresden, a campaign which on a single night killed an estimated 25,000 people, and is today still hotly debated; was it a legitimate military target or a last act of atavistic mass murder in a war already won?

From the history of the city - the ‘Florence of the Elbe’ - to the attack itself through to the eerie period of reconstruction under Soviet control in the following years, Sinclair McKay tells the untold stories of both the civilians and military.

Sinclair Mckay said: “I am completely thrilled to be working with the team at Viking on a subject that resonates powerfully even now. After 75 years, the hideous moral questions thrown up by the 1945 destruction of Dresden remain as perplexing to the people of that beautiful city as they do everywhere else. Time has also brought sharper clarity to individual stories, and the trajectory of family lives before and long after the cataclysm. This isn’t just about the darker impulses of war, though: for out of that fiery horror eventually came moving reconciliation, cultural rebirth and miraculous regeneration.”

Daniel Crewe, Publisher, Viking, said: “We’re all thrilled to welcome Sinclair McKay to Viking. His deep research, careful reflection and powerful storytelling will make for a highly moving account on this important anniversary.”

McKay’s previous bestsellers include The Secret Life of Bletchley Park which has sold 225,000 copies TCM and Bletchley Park Brainteasers which currently stands at 150,000 copies TCM.  The Lady in the Cellar (White Lion) and Secret Service Brainteasers (Headline) are published in September 2018.

Hollie McNish wins the Ted Hughes Prize

Writer and performance poet Hollie McNish has won 2016's £5,000 Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry for her poetic memoir about becoming a parent, Nobody Told Me (Blackfriars, an imprint of Little, Brown). 

McNish was announced the winner of the award, funded by Carol Ann Duffy from her honararium as Poet Laureate, at a ceremony at the Savile Club in Mayfair yesterday (29th March).

The Poetry Society’s Ted Hughes award judges, award-winning poets Jo Bell and Bernard O’Donoghue and singer-songwriter Kathryn Williams, praised McNish's "funny and serious, humane and consciousness-raising" work for its "vivid language", its ability to "put things that most people ignore right back in the spotlight" and for "skilfully tackl[ing] hidden agendas and political issues in our society".

One of the judges, Bell, said the collection had changed the way he thinks about women and should be compulsory reading for new parents. Taken from the author's personal diaries, it blends poetry and storytelling following McNish through pregnancy to her first pre-school drop off.

"Adrian Mitchell said that 'most poetry ignores most people' but Hollie’s book puts things that most people ignore right back in the spotlight," said Bell. "This book is more than the sum of its parts, combining the immediacy of a diary with straight talking poetry from a spoken word tradition. This book is funny and serious, humane and consciousness-raising: it changed the way I think about women (and I am one). Should be given to every new parent, and handed to them along with their baby-care products."

Williams said the collection would "resonate outside the poetry world to reach a new generation of poetry readers" and praised it for tackling issues such as public breast-feeding, non-waged care work and interracial relationships.

O’Donoghue, who last year was shortlisted for the TS Elliot Prize, added of McNish's work: "Hollie McNish describes the experience of pregnancy and young motherhood in a vivid language that brings both forms to life, and makes them real for readers to whom these things are new as well as those to whom they are familiar."

McNish's new collection, Plum, will publish in June 2017 with Picador. She has previously written two other collections, Papers (Greenwich Exchange) and Cherry Pie (Burning Eye Books) and co-wrote the play Offside (Bloomsbury).

Little, Brown win auction for John Grant's memoir

Little, Brown has bought the autobiography of musician John Grant.

Grant, who used to front American indie band The Czars, rose to fame in 2010 with his debut solo album, "Queen of Denmark". In the book, he will not only tell the story of his career but of his "extraordinary" life. 

Editor-in-chief Antonia Hodgson acquired world rights at auction from Becky Thomas of Johnson & Alcock, on behalf of Showpony Management.

Grant said: "Flying in the face of all reason and good judgement, Little, Brown is giving me the opportunity to write a book about my experiences in life thus far. It is the tale of a lower-middle-class homosexual humanoid male musician, addict, chronically depressed language enthusiast and underachiever who, in spite of himself, is learning to enjoy life, make sense of relationships and become an adult. Perhaps this is the cure for insomnia you've been searching for."

Hodgson said: "I’m a huge fan of John Grant’s music, but had no idea just how extraordinary his life has been. It is a story of family, alienation, masculinity, self-destruction, survival, the creative spirit – and told with such wit and honesty it moved everyone here who read the proposal. His voice on the page is just as unique and intimate as his music – you are drawn straight into his world. And what a large, compassionate, fascinating world it is."

Kate Tempest shortlisted for the Costa Book Awards

We are delighted that Kate made the shortlist for the 2016 Costa Poetry Award in the Poetry category for Let Them Eat Chaos.

The Costa Book Awards is one of the UK's most prestigious and popular literary prizes and recognises some of the most enjoyable books of the year, written by authors based in the UK and Ireland.

The judges said it was "A magical book about now....indispensable, wonderful, a cry from the heart to a wounded world."

Let Them Eat Chaos (Picador) is a call to action, and, both on the page and in Tempest's electric performance, one of the most powerful poetic statements of the year.

The prize for the category winner and the overall winner is announced in January 

 

William Trevor: 24 May 1928 – 20 November 2016

With great sadness the death of William Trevor, KBE, one of the great fiction writers of our time, was announced on Monday 20th November.

Born as William Trevor Cox in Mitchelstown, County Cork, Ireland in 1928, William Trevor was educated at St. Columba's College in Dublin. After graduating in history from Trinity College, Dublin, Trevor married Jane Ryan whom he’d met at university and to whom he dedicated many of his books and the couple moved to England where Trevor set himself up as a sculptor ‘rather like Jude the Obscure without the talent’ as he once described himself. The first of two sons was born in London where Trevor got a job as copywriter and it was only when he took a full-time job at a London advertising agency that he really began writing.  His first novel, A Standard of Behaviour, which he subsequently disowned and refused to have republished, came out in 1958. In later years he chose to describe The Old Boys, which was published in 1964 and went on to win the Hawthornden Prize for Literature, as his first novel. In its comedic portrayal of unseemly, sometimes desperate behaviour hidden beneath a thin veil of decorum, it prefigured the theme of most of his early and middle-period novels, many of them set in a rundown, post-War London. Later he turned his attention to his native Ireland, and in particular the tensions between the fading Anglo-Irish gentry and their Catholic neighbours. These were more complex books, exploring ideas of loyalty and betrayal, loss and belonging, often through multiple viewpoints, but always with a deeply felt compassion for all his characters.

Trevor went on to write over fifteen novels, which were garlanded with awards: he won the Whitbread Prize three times and was short-listed for the Booker Prize four times, most recently with The Story of Lucy Gault in 2002, which was a favourite for the Prize but lost out to The Life of Pi. Trevor’s novels are widely admired but it is perhaps on his short stories that his literary reputation will come to rest. For many years a contributor of stories to the New Yorker, he had a firm belief that the short story was as great an art form as the novel, and as difficult to write. His Collected Stories, published by Viking in two volumes in 2009, runs to almost 2000 pages, and the best of them, including ‘The Ballroom of Romance’, ‘Kathleen’s Field’ and ‘Cheating at Canasta’,  are among the greatest stories of the last half-century, drawing comparison with the earlier masters of the form, Chekhov, Maupassant and Joyce.

A modest and private man, Trevor disliked talking about his books and abhorred any personal publicity, believing that the work should stand for itself. He lived for many years in a secluded house in Devon, visiting Ireland frequently, taking walking holidays in Italy, and pursuing his passions of gardening and watching sport – especially rugby, cricket and tennis. But it was writing that truly absorbed him. 

Andrew Hewson, Chairman of J&A gave the following statement: 

"William Trevor was an early client of our agency's founder John Johnson. John fostered the close links with his then editor, James Michie at the Bodley Head, and introduced William to Peter Matson at the Sterling Lord Agency in New York, who remained his American agent all his life.

"There followed a sequence of critically acclaimed novels from The Old Boys to Children of Dynmouth, three anthologies of award winning short stories, and a series of some of the most outstanding single plays commissioned by the BBC, ATV and Anglia Television. These combined to install William Trevor as a true Master of the English language, a standing he was to sustain without pause.

"On John Johnson's retirement William became a client of the inestimable Pat Kavanagh at A.D. Peters, later PFD, but in a typically generous gesture he asked that John Johnson Ltd, and later Johnson & Alcock, continued to represent the back list. To our great pleasure the association was renewed in 2008, and we oversaw the republication of all of his early works, continued international success, and the publication of his Collected Stories, one of his most lasting contributions to the canon of literature.

"This agency looks back with great fondness over many years of friendship, and looks forward to safeguarding the legacy of this great man's life's work, as takes its rightful and honoured place at the forefront of modern literature."  

THE LONGEST FIGHT: IN WITH A SPORTING CHANCE

On 1st June the winners of the 2016 Cross Sports Book Awards will be announced at a ceremony held at Lords Cricket Ground in London. Emily Bullock's beautiful and brutal debut, THE LONGEST FIGHT, set in the gritty world of 1950s boxing, is shortlisted in the New Writer of the Year category and we'll be keeping our fingers crossed! An Independent on Sunday book of the year, where it was described as 'a fine addition to the canon of boxing literature', THE LONGEST FIGHT has most recently been reviewed by the Historical Novel Society: 'In her story about redemption and hope, Bullock's writing is as taut as the fighters in her ring'.

THE LONGEST FIGHT was inspired by Emily's boxing grandfather and she writes about how this fed into her experience of becoming a writer, in an essay for Bookanista. Emily will appear on BBC Radio 4's Open Book this summer to explore the enduring appeal of the boxing hero in fiction today. Myriad holds World English rights to THE LONGEST FIGHT: translation, film/TV and all other rights are with Ed Wilson at Johnson & Alcock. 

Margaret Hewson Prize 2015

We’re delighted to award the Margaret Hewson Prize 2015 to Anthea Morrison. Her short story, You Have What You Want about a new mother’s midnight riverside stroll won over all the judges with its clear, spare prose and powerful description of a woman’s altered state of mind. 

The Prize is open to all students on the Creative Writing MA at Royal Holloway – it aims to recognize and encourage new writing talent, and to commemorate Johnson & Alcock agent Margaret Hewson and her unique contribution to the publishing world.

Johnson & Alcock acquires Fox Mason

Johnson & Alcock has acquired the Fox Mason agency.

Ben Mason established Fox Mason in 2010, after eight years spent working at various London agencies.  His diverse list includes prize-winning authors of literary fiction as well as bestselling commercial fiction and non-fiction.

Anna Power at Johnson & Alcock said: “We’ve long admired Ben’s literary taste, and the vision and energy with which he’s built his thriving agency.  We’re delighted to be expanding Johnson & Alcock, as well as continuing with representation of so many of the brilliant Fox Mason authors.”

Ben Mason added: “I'm honoured to have worked with fine writers and great people. But now it's time for a new chapter in my career and I couldn't be leaving my clients in more capable - more professional hands. I know J&A will do an awesome job and I look forward to watching from the other side of the Atlantic as my clients thrive.”

Becky Thomas will join Johnson & Alcock as an Associate Agent bringing her full list of clients which include Kate Tempest, Tyler Keevil and Suzanne Moore.

The true face of Shakespeare revealed

Botanist and historian Mark Griffiths reveals in this month's Country Life magazine how he cracked a many-layered Tudor code and revealed the face of the living Shakespeare for the first time, on the title page of John Gerard’s Herball, 400 years after it was first published.

 

IN LOVE AND WAR is BBC R4 Book at Bedtime

Alex Preston's novel In Love and War is on Radio 4 in their Book at Bedtime slot, running for two weeks from 25 November, read by Carl Prekopp. 

A tale of love, heroism and resistance set against the stunning backdrop of 1930s Florence, In Love and War weaves fact and fiction to create a thrilling portrait of a man swept up in the chaos of war.  The book is currently available in hardback published by Faber.

Praise for In Love and War:

“Rich in period detail and utterly compelling… brilliant.” Kate Saunders, The Times

“Rich and evocative… powerfully affecting, ambitious in its scope, precise in its attention to detail and infused with a love for Florence and its motley eccentrics – their courage and their suffering.” Stephanie Merritt, The Observer

“An evocative portrait of passion and fascism. There is much to admire in Alex Preston’s third book…  a living, breathing Forsterian idyll, complete with eccentric and glamorous expats, bohemian writers, and passionate love affairs, all played out against the backdrop of scorching heat and iced Negronis. Taken aback by a stunning view from a window, Esmond is told that Florence is a city of such scorci: ‘A view you glimpse, all of a sudden, that leaps inside you.’ Preston’s narrative offers something comparable.” Lucy Scholes, Independent