Simon Mawer
Author of The Glass Room
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
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Works by Simon Mawer
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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.
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Women in War (1)
Booker Prize (1)
Awards
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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
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.… (more)