Jon Mcgregor Popular Books

Jon Mcgregor Biography & Facts

Jon McGregor (born 1976) is a British novelist and short story writer. In 2002, his first novel was longlisted for the Booker Prize, making him then the youngest-ever contender. His second and fourth novels were longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2006 and 2017 respectively. In 2012, his third novel, Even the Dogs, was awarded the International Dublin Literary Award. The New York Times has labelled him a "wicked British writer". Early life Born in Bermuda, McGregor was raised in the UK. He grew up in Norwich and Thetford, Norfolk. He attended City College Norwich sixth form and then studied for a degree in Media Technology and Production at Bradford University. In his final year there he contributed a series entitled "Cinema 100" to the anthology Five Uneasy Pieces (Pulp Faction). Career Having moved to Nottingham (where he now lives), he wrote his first novel, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things, while living on a narrowboat. It was nominated for the 2002 Booker Prize, making its author the youngest contender and only first novelist on the longlist. McGregor was only 26 at the time. If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things went on to win the Betty Trask Prize and the Somerset Maugham Award, among other honours. His novel So Many Ways to Begin, published in 2006, also found its way onto the Booker Prize longlist. McGregor was commissioned to write a short story, which was called "Close", for the Cheltenham Literature Festival in 2007. McGregor has had short fiction published by several magazines, including Granta magazine. His first collection of short stories is entitled This Isn't the Sort of Thing That Happens to Someone Like You (2012). His influences include Alice Munro, Douglas Coupland, Raymond Carver, Richard Brautigan and Charles Simic. In 2010, McGregor received an honorary doctorate from the University of Nottingham, and was made an honorary lecturer in their School of English Studies. He is currently a writer-in-residence for the charity First Story. On 13 June 2012, McGregor was awarded the International Dublin Literary Award for his third novel Even the Dogs, with Lord Mayor Andrew Montague announcing the winner at the Mansion House, Dublin. The book was nominated for the award by Rudomino State Library for Foreign Literature in Moscow. The International Dublin Literary Award was a competition among 147 writers nominated by international public libraries, including Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Egan. McGregor received a prize of €100,000. The prize's judging panel, which included the British novelist Tim Parks and the Trinidadian writer Elizabeth Nunez, described Even the Dogs, a novel detailing the highs and lows of drug addiction, as a "fearless experiment". McGregor described it as "a real honour to have been selected from such a huge list of fantastic works from around the world." He was the first British writer to win the award since Nicola Barker in 2000. Works Novels If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things (Bloomsbury, 2002) So Many Ways to Begin (Bloomsbury, 2006) Even the Dogs (Bloomsbury, 2010) Reservoir 13 (HarperCollins, 2017) Lean Fall Stand (HarperCollins, 2021) Short story collections This Isn't the Sort of Thing That Happens to Someone Like You (Bloomsbury, 2012) The Reservoir Tapes (2017) "we wave and call"(2012) Awards and honours 2002 Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2002 Commonwealth Writers Prize (Eurasia Region, Best First Book), shortlist, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2003 Booker Prize, longlist, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2003 Somerset Maugham Award, winner, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2003 British Book Awards, shortlist, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2003 Betty Trask Prize, winner, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things 2006 Booker Prize, longlist, So Many Ways to Begin 2010 BBC National Short Story Competition, runner-up 2010 University of Nottingham, honorary doctorate 2011 BBC National Short Story Competition, runner-up 2012 International Dublin Literary Award, winner, Even the Dogs 2017 Costa Book Award, Novel, Reservoir 13 2017 Goldsmiths Prize, Shortlist, Reservoir 13 2017 Booker Prize, Longlist, Reservoir 13 References Further reading Schoene, B. (2009). "Suburban Worlds: Rachel Cusk and Jon McGregor". The Cosmopolitan Novel. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748638154. External links [Jon's Official website has been hacked (9 July 2021) so this link has been deleted] "My desktop" in The Guardian. Discover the Jon Mcgregor popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jon Mcgregor books.

Best Seller Jon Mcgregor Books of 2024

  • Our Billie synopsis, comments

    Our Billie

    Ian Clayton

    'An astonishing work' Joanne HarrisEvery parent's worst nightmare became a reality for Ian Clayton. On a short holiday break in HayonWye he took his nineyearold twins canoeing, a...

  • Change Of Heart synopsis, comments

    Change Of Heart

    Barbara Anderson

    Oliver Gurth Perkins is seventyfive, and the darkest cloud on his horizon is that the local bookshop no longer stocks paperbacks of the Times cryptic crosswords. He has an easy com...

  • An Enduring Passion synopsis, comments

    An Enduring Passion

    Sam Torrance

    The Ryder Cup has defined Sam Torrance's life as a professional golfer. He has played with and against some of the greatest golfers the game has ever known, in the biggest and most...

  • Jacques the Fatalist synopsis, comments

    Jacques the Fatalist

    Denis Diderot & Michael Henry

    Denis Diderot (17131784) was among the greatest writers of the Enlightenment, and in Jacques the Fatalist he brilliantly challenged the artificialities of conventional French ficti...

  • Doctor Thorne synopsis, comments

    Doctor Thorne

    Anthony Trollope & Ruth Rendell

    Son of a bankrupt landowner, Frank Gresham is intent on marrying his beloved Mary Thorne, despite her illegitimacy and apparent poverty. Frank's ambitious mother and haughty aunt a...

  • The Figure In The Distance synopsis, comments

    The Figure In The Distance

    Otto De Kat

    Cambridge, Budapest, New York, Zurich, The Hague, Tel Aviv, the South Downs of England: the narrator has travelled everywhere. He has observed some of the major upheavals of the ce...

  • On Tangled Paths synopsis, comments

    On Tangled Paths

    Theodor Fontane & Peter James Bowman

    A moving love story and a vivid depiction of Berlin in the 1870s, from Germany's greatest nineteenthcentury novelist Theodor Fontane.Lene is a beautiful, orphaned young seamstress,...

  • We Were Young synopsis, comments

    We Were Young

    Niamh Campbell

    'Witty, fiery, wistful and even shocking, with engrossing heady prose, Campbell's style is unique' Irish Independent'An immensely enjoyable novel, and a great validation of Campbel...

  • The Land Lubbers Lying Down Below synopsis, comments

    The Land Lubbers Lying Down Below

    Helen Dunmore

    'Tonight it is the concert. Two Prodigies of Nature are coming to play in my lady's ballroom. As soon as the concert begins I understand why the whole world comes to stare and list...

  • Here Comes the Miracle synopsis, comments

    Here Comes the Miracle

    Anna Beecher

    'I adored this novel' Pandora Sykes'Incredibly moving' Charlie Gilmour'I read it in two evenings' Clover Stroud'Brilliant' Sarah MossIt begins with a miracle: a baby born too small...

  • The House on Vesper Sands synopsis, comments

    The House on Vesper Sands

    Paraic O’Donnell

    An Oprah Daily and CrimeReads Best Historical Novel of 2021Named a Library Reads Pick, Apple Books' Best Book, Amazon Fiction & Literature's “Best of the Month,” and a Powell's...

  • Little Eyes synopsis, comments

    Little Eyes

    Samanta Schweblin & Megan McDowell

    A visionary novel about our interconnected world, about the collision of horror and humanity, from the Man Bookershortlisted master of the spinetingling taleA Guardian & Observ...

  • The Pretty Delicious Cafe synopsis, comments

    The Pretty Delicious Cafe

    Danielle Hawkins

    One flaky family. One exboyfriend who won't go away. And one handsome stranger who probably will ... For fans of Doc Martin and Monica McInerney, a warm, witty novel, brimming with...

  • How It Ends synopsis, comments

    How It Ends

    Dan Collins

    Following a stint as a Las Vegas showgirl and an early botched marriage, Lee Annis has finally found some definition and success as part of Anaconda, the band she fronts alongside ...

  • Betrayal synopsis, comments

    Betrayal

    Stewart Binns

    'Brilliant. An explosive thriller with true authenticity' Tom Marcus, bestselling author of Soldier Spy January, 1981. They're undercover in Belfast.Determined to put an end to a w...

  • Battling Jack Turpin synopsis, comments

    Battling Jack Turpin

    Jackie Turpin

    Now in his 80th year, 'Battling' Jack Turpin is the last surviving member of his generation of Britain's bestknown and bestloved boxing family.Jack's father, Lionel Turpin, came fr...

  • Pierre and Jean synopsis, comments

    Pierre and Jean

    Guy de Maupassant

    The fraternal love that Pierre Roland feels for his younger brother Jean has always been tinged with jealousy. But when a lawyer arrives at the house of their parents, to declare t...