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B I O
John Connolly was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1968 and has, at various
points in his life, worked as a journalist, a barman, a local
government official, a waiter and a dogsbody at Harrods department
store in London. He studied English in Trinity College, Dublin
and journalism at Dublin City University, subsequently spending five years working as a freelance journalist for
The Irish Times newspaper, to which he continues to contribute.
His first novel, Every Dead Thing, was published in 1999, and introduced the character of Charlie Parker, a former policeman hunting the killer of his wife and daughter. Dark Hollow followed in 2000. The third Parker novel, The Killing Kind, was published in 2001, with The White Road following in 2002. In 2003, John published his fifth noveland first stand-alone bookBad Men. In 2004, Nocturnes, a collection of novellas and short stories, was added to the list, and 2005 marked the publication of the fifth Charlie Parker novel, The Black Angel. John's seventh novel, The Book of Lost Things, a story about fairy stories and the power that books have to shape our world and our imaginations, was published in September 2006, followed by the next Parker novel, The Unquiet, in 2007, and The Reapers, in 2008. He is currently working on The Lovers which, if he stops pfaffing about, will be published in 2009. John Connolly is based in Dublin but divides his time between his native city and the United States, where each of his novels has been set. Q & A. . . Have more questions? We have lots of answers! Check the Q & A section. I N T E R V I E W S W I T H J O H N "Is there a greater, deeper evil at the heart of the universe, from which our own generally inferior version is drawn, like water from a well? I don't know. The books suggest that there may be. If one believes in God, then does one accept the existence of the opposite of God? I don't feel any urge or responsibility to provide answers to those questions. It's enough to raise them, and to consider them in the context of the books." "I never signed a contract to say that I was only going to write crime novels, I didn't make that kind of pact with anybody and not every story can be told through the medium of crime fiction, and also it's nice to stretch yourself..." "How characters emerge from my imagination and enter the books is a process that I don't really understand...." "I have never planned a book. I don't know when I begin a book how it is going to end or what the middle section is going to be but there will always be an idea behind it..." "You need to write every day. Everyone who writes a first book is doing something else at the same time, trying to raise a family, trying to work for a living and you've got all these things on the go and it's very hard to find the time to write, you tend to fit it in here and there..." "I quickly discovered that working is a vastly overrated activity, and if you can get away with doing as little as possible, then perhaps you should..." "...he always looks hard and fast at the violent elements in his work, and ensures that they are integral to the plot and not for titillation..." (from a "criminal conversation" with John Connolly and Paul Johnston) "I was curious both about the United States - a place about which I have mixed feelings, finding it both welcoming and threatening..." "I began writing a year or so after I was taught to read. A grade school teacher would pay me money for Tarzan stories that I wrote..." |