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Simon Mawer

Author of The Glass Room

16+ Works 3,461 Members 167 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Author and biology teacher Simon Mawer was born in England in 1948. He studied at Somerset's Millfield School and Oxford's Brasenose College, receiving a degree in zoology. Mawer's first novel, Chimera, won the McKitterick Prize, while The Fall earned the 2003 Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain show more Literature. He has written several other novels, as well as the exhibition companion volume Gregor Mendel: Planting the Seeds of Genetics. His novel, Tightrope, made the New Zealand Best Seller List in 2015 and won the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction. (Bowker Author Biography) Simon Mawer has a degree from Oxford & lives in Rome. He is the author of "Mendel's Dwarf" & several other widely praised & prize winning novels. 010 r show less

Includes the name: Simon Mawer

Series

Works by Simon Mawer

The Glass Room (2009) 1,393 copies, 68 reviews
The Girl Who Fell From the Sky (2012) 577 copies, 38 reviews
The Gospel of Judas (2000) 374 copies, 8 reviews
Mendel's Dwarf (1997) 347 copies, 13 reviews
The Fall (2003) 255 copies, 10 reviews
Tightrope (2015) 186 copies, 10 reviews
Prague Spring (2018) 133 copies, 10 reviews
Ancestry (2022) 60 copies, 4 reviews
Swimming to Ithaca (2006) 46 copies, 3 reviews
A Jealous God (1996) 9 copies
Place in Italy (1992) 9 copies
The Bitter Cross (1992) 7 copies
Chimera (1989) 5 copies
A queda: romance (2004) 3 copies

Associated Works

Between Silk and Cyanide (1998) — Introduction, some editions — 1,037 copies, 32 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1948
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
England
Cyprus
Malta
Channel Islands, UK
Scotland
Rome, Italy
Education
Millfield School, Somerset, England, UK
Brasenose College, Oxford University
Occupations
Biology teacher
Relationships
Connie (wife)
Matthew (son)
Julia (daughter)
Awards and honors
Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature (2003)
Man Booker Prize Shortlist (2009)
Walter Scott Prize Shortlist (2010)
Booker Prize Longlist (2009)
Agent
Charles Walker
Short biography
His father and grandfather served in the Royal Air Force. As a typical nomadic military family, his childhood was spent, amongst various moves in England, some years in Cyprus and Malta. These experiences gave him a love of the Mediterranean world and a taste for exile. From the age of eight he was educated in boarding schools, which forced upon him the need to preserve a secret, interior world in a society where privacy was at a premium, training that was significant in his development as a writer. After university he taught biology in the Channel Islands, then moved to Scotland, then Malta, before moving to Rome where he has lived ever since. Teaching and family took up much of his time, and it wasn't until his fortieth year that his first novel, Chimera, was published by Hamish Hamilton, a British book publishing house founded in 1931 which now belongs to Penguin Books. It won the McKitterick Prize for first novels. Mendel's Dwarf followed three works of modest success and established him as a writer of note on both sides of the Atlantic. The New York Times judged it one of the "books to remember" of 1998. The option on a film version was sold first to Uzo and then to Barbra Streisand. The Gospel of Judas and The Fall followed. He published Swimming to Ithaca, a novel partially inspired by his childhood on the island of Cyprus. A book called A place in Italy (1992), written in the wake of A year in Provence, recounts the first two years of his life in an Italian village. Gregor Mendel: Planting the Seeds of Genetics, another non-fiction book, was published in conjunction with the Field Museum of Chicago as a companion volume to the museum's exhibition of the same name. In 2009, Mawer published The Glass Room, a novel about a modernist villa built in a Czech city in 1928. Mawer has acknowledged that the book was primarily inspired by the Villa Tugendhat which was designed by architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and built in Brno in the Czech Republic in 1928–30. Mawer has lived in Italy for more than three decades, but he considers home to be where the mind is.

Members

Reviews

Beautifully written novel that intrigued and captured my imagination. A story centred around a house in the Czech Republic designed by a famous architect and tells a powerful story of it’s occupants before, during and after WW II , haunting, intelligent and engaging and a book I fell in love with slowly but will remember a long time from now.

On Honeymoon in Venice in 1928 Vikor and Lisel Landauer face a new world when they meet brilliant architect Rainer Von Abt. Soon, on a hillside near a provincial Czech town, the Landauer house with its celebrated Glass Room will become a modernist masterpiece of travertine floors and onyx walls, filled with light and optimism. But as Victor is Jewish, when Nazi troops arrive the family must flee. The house slips from hand to hand, Nazi to Soviet and finally to Czechoslovak state. And if the walls could talk this would be their story......

I love the concept of this story, as I have a fascination with houses and their past occupants and histories and this book fitted me perfectly. It started out quite slow and took me a few chapters to engage with the characters whom I didn’t really care for and yet I couldn’t put the book down because I was intrigued by their stories and the house.

The characters are extremely well drawn and while I didn’t particularly like them, I did find them real and believable which makes this story read like non fiction as opposed to fiction.

The Glass Room was shortlisted for The Man Booker Prize in 2009 and I now look forward to checking out other books by Simon Maher.
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DemFen | 67 other reviews | Oct 31, 2024 |
3.5 Stars

[b:Ancestry: A Novel|61482672|Ancestry A Novel|Simon Mawer|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1658044146l/61482672._SY75_.jpg|96742940] Is a very well written blend of Ancestral research and what the author imagines may have been the stories of his Ancestors from the records he found during his research.


I have a passion for All things Ancestry and history and have spent years researching my own family. It’s an amazing hobby that is so rewarding and interesting. So when I came across this book it really piqued my interest.

Simon Mawer has achieved a very cleverly constructed story of his ancestors with fact and fiction. It’s a moving story where women struggled at the hands of men and yet reared and provided for families under very trying circumstances. Every family has a story to tell and Simon Mawer’s family have led interesting lives. While I enjoyed the book for its research and story I am not sure how I would have reacted to this one had I not had a passion for Ancestry.

I do think the book could have been trimmed down quite a bit and while the Crimean war battles was very documented I did find it made for tedious reading. An interest and engaging story, just not one for my favourites shelf.
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DemFen | 3 other reviews | Oct 31, 2024 |
I found this book a fascinating read as a picture of the work of the Special Operations Executive. Our heroine is Marian Sutro, a 19 year old bilingual Engish girl who's spent much of her life in France. She's recruited to the SOE in 1943, and after training will form part of the Resistance in France. It becomes clear that her special task will be to make contact with an old family friend, Clement Pelletier, who is a nuclear physicist in Paris. Her training, her growing sexual awareness, her tasks as she arrives first of all in rural south west France and then in Paris are all excitingly described. I found her adventures, her feelings, the picture of Paris under German occupation all involving and believable. How should she behave when nobody is to be trusted, when everyone she meets might turn out to be shadowing or following her? Mawer's descriptions of suspicion and claustrophobia, of hardship and deprivation are moving and involving. Only Marion's unexpected action in the last few pages of the novel failed to hit the right note, but the ending itself was convincing. A well researched and exciting book.… (more)
 
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Margaret09 | 37 other reviews | Apr 15, 2024 |
This novel, written in English but with the flavour of a translated text, tells the story of a house in Czechoslovakia and the people who lived there before, during and after WWII. However, it is not a "war story" but a story of a house... And the people who occupied it during these tempestuous times. The house is designed for a modern couple who wish to look forward and not back. The architect they meet on honeymoon has the same idea. The house is built but the man is a Jew. The story tells of their lives, and those who follow them, and their interactions with the house..the Glass...Space.
I was engrossed by the novel, captured by the characters, and the house.. The real one looks spectacular!
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arkayspark | 67 other reviews | Mar 24, 2024 |

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Statistics

Works
16
Also by
1
Members
3,461
Popularity
#7,352
Rating
3.8
Reviews
167
ISBNs
162
Languages
9
Favorited
4

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