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Benjamin Myers

British writer

Benjamin Myers (born January 1976) is an English writer and journalist.

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Work
  • 3 Bibliography
    • 3.1 Fiction
      • 3.1.1 Novels
      • 3.1.2 Short Stories
      • 3.1.3 Crime fiction
      • 3.1.4 Short fiction
    • 3.2 Non-fiction
    • 3.3 Poetry
    • 3.4 Music biography / essays
  • 4 Awards
  • 5 Personal life
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Early life

Myers grew up in Belmont, County Durham, and was a pupil at the estate's local comprehensive school where he become interested in reading and skateboarding.

Myers attended his first concert in Durham in March 1990, when he was fourteen. Headlined by Steadfast, it led to him forming the punk rock band Sour Face the next year. The band quickly became involved in the Durham hardcore punk scene, alongside Steadfast, False Face and XdisciplineX. Despite being one of the few bands in the scene that was not straight edge, Sour Face became the mascots of the scene, with their third performance seeing them open for NOFX. Voorhees' first performance was opening for Sour Face in September 1991.

As a teenager Myers began writing for British weekly Melody Maker. In 1997 he became their staff writer while residing in the Oval Mansions squat for several years. In 2011 he published an article, about his brief time as an intern at News of the World. He has spoken about failing English Literature at A-level and being rejected by "more than a hundred" universities before being accepted by the University of Bedfordshire (formerly Luton University).

Work

Myers' books span literary fiction, nature/landscape writing, crime, historical fiction and poetry. He has been translated into eight languages. As a journalist, he has written about literature, music and the arts for a number of publications including New Statesman, Mojo, The Guardian, NME, The Spectator, BBC, New Scientist, Alternative Press, Kerrang!, Plan B, Arena, Bizarre, The Quietus, Vice, Shortlist, Caught by the River, Metal Hammer, The Morning Star, Cl*ic Rock, 3:AM Magazine, Mineshaft and Time Out.

His novel The Offing (2019) featured on Radio 4's Book At Bedtime, was a Radio 2 Book Club choice and chosen as a book of the year in The Times. The audio book was narrated by actor Ralph Ineson.

Myers' book The Gallows Pole (2017), a novelisation of the true story of the Cragg Vale Coiners, received a Roger Deakin Award and won the 2018 Walter Scott Prize for historical fiction. As part of the prize, both author and book *le appeared as the official Royal Mail franking stamp for a week on an estimated 60 million pieces of mail. The Gallows Pole was signed by Third Man Books, part of Third Man Records, for publication in the US/Canada. In 2021 the BBC announced an adaptation of the novel by director Shane Meadows. Meadows said: "I've never made a period drama before so I'm absolutely buzzing, and to be doing it with Piers at the BBC, his incredible team, and Element Pictures is nothing short of an honour." For his part, the BBC's drama commissioner Piers Wenger described the drama as "destined to feel utterly of the moment". At an online press event, he added: "Shane Meadows… is one of the most utterly British, unmissable filmmakers that we have, and he wanted to come and work for the BBC because he wanted to tell a particular story. And his story is the Gallows Pole, which is set in the 18th century in Yorkshire and pre-industrialised Yorkshire and is about a rural bunch of weavers and farm-workers who, in the face of the oncoming storm of the Industrial Revolution, wanted to hold their ground and to protect their livelihood and the way of life that they'd known for generations. And they became counterfeiters, they took coins and they clipped them to make new coins and to distribute that wealth amongst the community." The Gallows Pole will be produced by Element Pictures, whose previous *les include Normal People, Dublin Murders, and The Favourite.

Beastings (2014) won the Portico Prize For Literature and the Northern Writers' Award. It was also longlisted for the Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize.

In 2014 Myers won the Society of Author's Tom-Gallon Trust Award for his short story, 'The Folk Song Singer'. He was runner-up in the same prize in 2018 for his story 'A Thousand Acres Of English Soil'. His poem 'The Path To Pendle Hill' was selected by New Statesman as one of its Poems Of The Year 2015 and work from the same collection were read by Myers on BBC1 programme Countryfile.

Pig Iron (2012) was set in the traveller/gypsy community of the north-east of England and was the first to be published under his full name Benjamin Myers. It won the inaugural Gordon Burn Prize and was longlisted for 3:AM Magazine.com's 'Novels of the Year' and runner-up in The Guardian's 'Not The Booker Prize', in the same year.

Myers' second novel, Richard: A Novel (2010) was a fictionalized account of the life of musician Richey Edwards. It was published by Picador in October 2010, and polarised critical opinion.

Myers has published several poetry collections and written a number of music biographies which have been widely translated. He is a founding member of the Brutalists, a literary collective including authors Adelle Stripe and Tony O'Neill, and widely acknowledged as the first literary movement to be launched by social networking sites.

In late 2018 it was reported he had signed to Bloomsbury Publishing.The deal was satirised in the 'Books & Bookmen' column in Private Eye.

In 2019 he was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters from York St John University.

Bibliography

Fiction

Novels

  • The Book of * (Wrecking Ball Press, 2004)
  • Richard: A Novel (Picador, 2010)
  • Pig Iron (Bluemoose, 2012. Bloomsbury, 2019)
  • Beastings (Bluemoose, 2014. Bloomsbury, 2019)
  • The Gallows Pole (Bluemoose, 2017. Bloomsbury, 2019)
  • The Offing (Bloomsbury, 2019)
  • The Perfect Golden Circle (Bloomsbury, 2022)

Short Stories

  • Male Tears (Bloomsbury, 2021)

Crime fiction

  • Turning Blue (Moth/Mayfly, 2016)
  • These Darkening Days (Moth/Mayfly, 2017)

Short fiction

  • The Whip Hand (Tangerine Press, 2018). Short story (Signed/limited edition handsewn chapbook)
  • Snorri & Frosti (Galley Beggar Press / 3:AM Press, 2013). Novella (limited edition paperback and Ebook)

Non-fiction

  • American Heretics: Rebel Voices In Music (Codex, 2002)
  • Under The Rock (Elliott & Thompson, 2018)

Poetry

  • I, Axl: An American Dream (online only, 2008–2009)
  • Spam: Email Inspired Poems (Blackheath, 2008)
  • Nowhere Fast (co-written with Tony O'Neill and Adelle Stripe (Captains Of Industry, 2008)
  • The Raven of Jórvíkshire (Tangerine Press, 2017)
  • Heathcliff Adrift (New Writing North, 2014. Reissued 2018)
  • The Offing: Poems by Romy Landau (Bloomsbury/Tangerine Press, 2019)

Music biography / essays

  • John Lydon:: The Sex Pistols, Pil and Anti-Celebrity (IMP 2005)
  • Green Day:: American Idiots and the New Punk Explosion (IMP / Disinformation, 2005)
  • System of a Down:: Right Here in Hollywood (IMP / Disinformation, 2006)
  • Muse:: Inside the Muscle Museum (IMP 2004 and 2007)
  • The Clash:: Rock Retrospectives (2007, with Ray Lowry)

Awards

  • 2013 Northern Writers' Award winner for Beastings
  • 2013 Gordon Burn Prize winner for Pig Iron
  • 2014 Tom-Gallon Trust Award winner for The Folk Song Singer
  • 2015 Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize longlist for Beastings
  • 2015 The Portico Prize For Literature winner for Beastings
  • 2016 Roger Deakin Award winner for The Gallows Pole
  • 2017 Republic of Consciousness Prize longlist for The Gallows Pole
  • 2018 Tom-Gallon Trust Award (runner-up) for A Thousands Acres Of English Soil
  • 2018 Walter Scott Prize winner for The Gallows Pole
  • 2019 Prix Polars Pourpres Découverte for Turning Blue (published in France as Dégradation)
  • 2020 The Portico Prize For Literature shortlisted for Under The Rock
  • 2020 Lieblingsbuch der Unabhängigen (Independent Booksellers' Award in Germany) winner for The Offing

Personal life

Myers lives in the Calder Valley with his wife, the author Adelle Stripe.

References

    External links

    • Myers' website
    • Ben Myers' Guardian articles and profile