Philip Hoare Popular Books

Philip Hoare Biography & Facts

Philip Hoare (born Patrick Kevin Philip Moore, 1958) is an English writer, especially of history and biography. He instigated the Moby Dick Big Read project. He is Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Southampton and Leverhulme artist-in-residence at the Marine Institute, Plymouth University, which awarded him an honorary doctorate in 2011. Name He was born Patrick Moore. He chose the name Philip Hoare to avoid confusion with astronomer Patrick Moore: Imagine having to spend your entire life living with people asking: 'You're not that astronomer, are you?' Or: 'Do you play the xylophone?' Another reason was that when I was managing bands I used to review my own bands for the NME and Sounds as Philip Hoare. Philip was my confirmation name; Hoare my mother's maiden name. Life Hoare was born in Southampton and attended St Mary's College. He then studied at St Mary's University, Twickenham. In 1982–83, he ran the record label Operation Twilight, a UK-based subsidiary of the Belgian label Les Disques du Crépuscule, which launched the career of the Pale Fountains. In 2009, he exhibited artworks made with Angela Cockayne at Viktor Wynd Fine Art Inc in London. Writing career Philip Hoare was the winner of the 2009 Samuel Johnson Prize, now known as the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, for his work Leviathan, or the Whale. The book, which charts both a personal and societal fascination with whales that approaches the mystical, met critical acclaim. Jonathan Mirsky, writing for Literary Review, praised Hoare's poignancy and awe ("Whales defy gravity, occupy other dimensions; they live in a medium that would overwhelm us, and which far exceeds our earthly sway moving through a world we know nothing about") as well as his ability to draw in the broader significance of whaling to the foundations of American capitalism ("it was as if the antediluvian beasts had to die in order to assert the modern world"). Whales featured in his book RisingTideFallingStar which blended travel, memoir and literary history. The Guardian described it as "a remarkable book that sometimes feels rather loosely fitted together, but is always rich and strange." Works Hoare is the author of eleven works of non-fiction: Serious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant (1990). Noël Coward: A Biography (1995) Wilde's Last Stand: Decadence, Conspiracy, and the First World War (1997) Spike Island: The Memory of a Military Hospital (2000), the story of Netley Hospital in Southampton The Ghosts of Netley (2004) England's Lost Eden: Adventures in a Victorian Utopia (2005), about Mary Anne Girling and the New Forest Shakers Leviathan or, The Whale (2008), which won the 2009 BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction The Whale: In Search Of The Giants Of The Sea (2010) The Sea Inside (2013) RisingTideFallingStar (2017) Albert and the Whale: Albrecht Dürer and How Art Imagines Our World (2021) He has also edited The Sayings of Noël Coward (1997). Hoare has co-authored or contributed to the following publications: Essay on the evolution of class in the UK in a British Council pamphlet, Posh: The Evolution of the Traditional British Brand (ed. Sorrel Hershberg, 1999). An essay in Linder: Works 1976–2006 (2006), a collection about Linder Sterling. Gabriel Orozco (2006), exhibition catalogue and texts, with Mark Godfrey. Pet Shop Boys (2006), catalogue and texts, with Chris Heath. Introduction to David Austen (2007) (eds. Emma Dean and Michael Stanley). Foreword to Made in Southampton (2008), a box-set of prints. Provenance (2010), with Angela Cockayne, a response to Wunderkammen. Essay, "Something against nothing", in Tania Kovats (2011) (ed. Jeremy Millar). Dominion: A Whale Symposium (2012) (eds. Hoare and Angela Cockayne). Essay in Malicious Damage: the Defaced Library Books of Kenneth Halliwell and Joe Orton (2013), (ed. Ilsa Colsell). Essay in Southampton: A City Lost ... And Found (2013), a collection of drawings by Eric Meadus. Record of a discussion between Hoare, Christopher Frayling and Mark Kermode on David Bowie's cultural impact, in David Bowie is the subject (2013) (eds. Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh). Greetings from Darktown : an illustrator's miscellany, a collection of the work of Jonny Hannah, with texts by Hoare, Sheena Calvert and Peter Chrisp (2014). Foreword to As is the sea (2014), writing by students from the Royal College of Art (ed. Jessie Bond). Another Green World – Linn Botanic Gardens: Encounters with a Scottish Arcadia (2015), photographs by Alison Turnbull, text by Hoare. ——————— Notes Other projects He has been interested in cetaceans since early childhood. He wrote and presented the BBC Arena film The Hunt for Moby-Dick, and directed three films for BBC's Whale Night. Between 2011 and 2012, his self-professed 'whale obsession' led him to create the Moby Dick Big Read. The project, curated by Hoare and artist Angela Cockayne, involved the construction of an online audiobook of all 135 chapters of Herman Melville's classic Moby Dick; or, the Whale. The readings were delivered by a multitude of celebrities, including Tilda Swinton, Stephen Fry, Sir David Attenborough, John Waters, Simon Callow and David Cameron, and accompanied by images from contemporary artists such as Anish Kapoor, Antony Gormley, George Shaw and Susan Hiller. The readings were uploaded to the Moby Dick Big Read website, with one chapter available for download per day from 16 September 2012. All downloads are free but donations are invited to 'Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society' (WDCS). References External links 2008 profile 2005 profile Moby Dick Big Read The Whale blogsite. Discover the Philip Hoare popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Philip Hoare books.

Best Seller Philip Hoare Books of 2024

  • Superhuman synopsis, comments

    Superhuman

    Professor Lord Robert Winston & Lori Oliwenstein

    Accompanying the major new BBC documentary series, Superhuman explores the human bodys astonishing ability to heal, renew and regenerate itself. In recording the before, during and...

  • Fingers in the Sparkle Jar synopsis, comments

    Fingers in the Sparkle Jar

    Chris Packham

    Voted the UK’s Favourite Nature BookThe memoir that inspired Chris Packham's BBC documentary, Asperger’s and MeEvery minute was magical, every single thing it did was fascinating a...

  • The Deep synopsis, comments

    The Deep

    Alex Rogers

    There's so much we don't know about what lies deep beneath the ocean's surface and the time to find out is growing increasingly precious . . .Professor Alex Rogers is one of the w...

  • How to Live Forever synopsis, comments

    How to Live Forever

    Sue Nelson & Richard Hollingham

    The Lives Less Ordinary series brings you the most exciting, adventurous and entertaining truelife writing that is out there, for men who are timepoor but want the best. Lives Less...

  • Beside the Seaside synopsis, comments

    Beside the Seaside

    Jane Struthers

    Can you remember why the sea is salty?How does the moon affect the tide?Where were Britain's most notorious places for smugglers?And what was the mystery of St Michael's Mount?Ther...

  • Measuring the Universe synopsis, comments

    Measuring the Universe

    Kitty Ferguson

    Suppose you and I still wondered whether all of the pinpoints of light in the night sky are the same distance from us. Suppose none of our contemporaries could tell us whether the ...

  • Souvenir synopsis, comments

    Souvenir

    Michael Bracewell

    'The best evocation I've read of London in the '80s' Neil Tennant'I loved Souvenir . . . it rescued some things for me a certain aesthetic, a philosophical engagement with time an...

  • The Swan synopsis, comments

    The Swan

    Stephen Moss

    From the renowned naturalist Stephen Moss comes the musthave gift for bird lovers this Christmas. 'Wherever there is a stretch of water for them to find food and make thei...

  • Where the Wild Winds Are synopsis, comments

    Where the Wild Winds Are

    Nick Hunt

    Selected as a Book of the Year by the Financial Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Spectator"Travel writing in excelsis." Jan Morris, author of Venice"A thrilling and gorgeous tale...