Alan Judd
Alan Judd | |
---|---|
Birth name | Alan Edwin Petty |
Born | 1946 (age 77–78) |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Other work | Diplomat, security analyst, and writer |
Alan Judd (born 1946) is a pseudonym used by Alan Edwin Petty.[1] Born in 1946, he is a former soldier and diplomat who now works as a security analyst and writer in the United Kingdom. He writes both books and articles, regularly contributing to a number of publications, including The Daily Telegraph, the Spectator and The Oldie. His books include both fiction and non-fiction titles, with his novels often drawing on his military background.
Fiction Titles
Charles Thoroughgood novels:
- A Breed of Heroes (1981 - adapted by Charles Wood as a BBC television film in 1996)
- Legacy (2001)
- Uncommon Enemy (2012)
- Inside Enemy (2014)
- Deep Blue (2017)
- Accidental Agent (2019)
- Queen and Country (2022)
Other novels:
- Short of Glory (1984)
- The Noonday Devil (1987)
- Tango (1989)
- The Devil's Own Work (1991)
- The Kaiser's Last Kiss (2003)
- Dancing with Eva (2006)
- Slipstream (2015)
- Shakespeare's Sword (2018)
- A Fine Madness (2021)
Non fiction Titles
- Ford Madox Ford (1990)
- First World War Poets (Character Sketches) (1997)
- The Quest for C: Mansfield Cumming And the Founding of the Secret Service (1999)[2]
Awards
- A Breed of Heroes won the 1981 Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize and was shortlisted and became runner-up in the 1981 Booker Prize.
- In 1991, he won the Guardian Fiction Award for his book The Devil's Own Work.
References
- ^ Project MUSE - An Interview with Alan Judd Retrieved 2012-01-02.
- ^ Kieffer, George C. (June 2000). "The Quest For C: Mansfield Cumming and the founding of the Secret Service". RUSI Journal. 145 (3): 75–76. eISSN 1744-0378. ISSN 0307-1847. ProQuest 212131452. Retrieved 3 August 2022 – via ProQuest.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to Alan Judd.
- A Brief Biography
- David Higham Associates
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The Guardian's Guardian Fiction Prize
- Crumb Borne by Clive Barry (1965)
- The Dear Green Place by Archie Hind (1966)
- Winter Journey by Eva Figes (1967)
- A Song and a Dance by P. J. Kavanagh (1968)
- Poor Lazarus by Maurice Leitch (1969)
- When Did You Last See your Father? by Margaret Blount (1970)
- The Big Chapel by Thomas Kilroy (1971)
- G by John Berger (1972)
- In the Country of the Skin by Peter Redgrove (1973)
- The Bottle Factory Outing by Beryl Bainbridge (1974)
- Friends and Romans by Sylvia Clayton (1975)
- Falstaff by Robert Nye (1976)
- The Condition of Muzak by Michael Moorcock (1977)
- The Murderer by Roy Heath (1978)
- Night in Tunisia by Neil Jordan and The House of Hunger by Dambudzo Marechera (1979)
- A Month in the Country by J. L. Carr (1980)
- Kepler by John Banville (1981)
- Where I Used to Play on the Green by Glyn Hughes (1982)
- Waterland by Graham Swift (1983)
- Empire of the Sun by J. G. Ballard (1984)
- Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd (1985)
- Continent by Jim Crace (1986)
- The Levels by Peter Benson (1987)
- Sweet Desserts by Lucy Ellmann (1988)
- Rosehill: Portrait from a Midlands City by Carol Lake (1989)
- Shape-Shifter by Pauline Melville (1990)
- The Devil's Own Work by Alan Judd (1991)
- Poor Things by Alasdair Gray (1992)
- The Eye in the Door by Pat Barker (1993)
- Debatable Land by Candia McWilliam (1994)
- Heart's Journey in Winter by James Buchan (1995)
- Reading in the Dark by Seamus Deane (1996)
- Fugitive Pieces by Anne Michaels (1997)
- Trumpet by Jackie Kay (1998)
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