Matt Whyman | |
---|---|
Born | 1969 Amersham, Buckinghamshire |
Occupation | novelist |
Nationality | English |
Period | 1993–present |
Genre | Young adult fiction |
Notable works | Boy Kills Man |
Website | |
www |
Matt Whyman is a British novelist, also known for his work as an advice columnist for numerous teenage magazines.
Biography
Born in 1969, Matt Whyman grew up in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, and has an MA from the UEA Creative Writing course (1992) taught by Sir Malcolm Bradbury and Rose Tremain. He has written widely for all ages across a range of subjects in fiction and non-fiction, notably Boy Kills Man (2004), a critically acclaimed story of Colombian child assassins which is published in translation around the world, the bestselling comic memoir Walking With Sausage Dogs (2011) and The Unexpected Genius of Pigs (2018).
In 1995, Whyman became the first male advice columnist for 19 magazine. He went on to hold a 10-year residency as AOL UK's online agony uncle,[1] and for 18 years at Bliss Magazine from 1996 until its closure in 2014. He has created many national health awareness campaigns for BBC Radio 1, CLIC Sargent,[2] Macmillan and Brook Advisory, written widely on teenage issues for the national press, and often appeared on radio and television in this role. In 1997, Whyman co-presented a series of ITV's cult Saturday morning sex and relationships show, Love Bites, and from 2011-2013 served as the resident agony uncle on BBC Radio 1's live advice show, The Surgery.[3]
As well as teaching creative writing across the UK, and for the British Council in Russia, Mexico,[4] Africa[5] and the Middle East,[6] Whyman is an established ghostwriter and collaborative author. In the latter role, he has worked on books with Billy Connolly (Tracks Across America, 2016), Charles Eugster (Age is Just a Number 2017), Matthew Syed (You are Awesome, 2018) and Gareth Southgate (Anything is Possible, 2020) among others. In 2015, he wrote the graphic novel Username: Evie, with the story provided by Joe Sugg, who was credited as the lead author of the work,[7] and with the art provided by Amrit Birdi, as well as two further titles, Username: Regenerated (2016) and Username: Uprising (2017). Whyman is also the author of The Nice & Accurate Good Omens TV Companion (2019) to accompany the series, Good Omens, based upon the novel by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, and Our Planet, based on the Netflix series, with a foreword by Sir David Attenborough.
Matt Whyman lives in West Sussex. He is married with four children.
Books
Novels
- Man or Mouse (2000), Hodder Headline
- Columbia Road (2002) Hodder Headline
- Superhuman (2003), Hodder Children's Books
- Boy Kills Man (2004), Hodder Children's Books
- The Wild (2005), Hodder Children's Books
- So Below (2005), Simon & Schuster (republished as Street Runners in 2008)
- Inside the Cage (2007), Simon & Schuster /Atheneum Books (as Icecore)
- Goldstrike (2009), Simon & Schuster & Atheneum Books
- Lazlo Strangolov's Feather & Bone (2009) Walker Books
- Lazlo Strangolov's Tooth & Claw (2011) Walker Books
- Battle Champions: Academy Attack (2013) Simon & Schuster (co-written as Jack Carson)
- Battle Champions: Canyon Clash (2013) Simon & Schuster (co-written as Jack Carson)
- Battle Champions: Swampland Slam (2013) Simon & Schuster co-written as Jack Carson)
- Battle Champions: Terminal Takedown (2013) Simon & Schuster (co-written as Jack Carson)
- The Savages (2013) Hot Key Books
- American Savage (2014) Hot Key Books
- Boy Kills Man Tenth Anniversary Edition (2014) Hot Key Books
- Bad Apple (2016) Hot Key Books
Non fiction
- Wise Guides: Smoking (2000), Hodder Children's Books
- Wise Guides: Drinking (2002), Hodder Children's Books
- XY: A Toolkit for Life (2002), Hodder Children's Books (republished as Unzipped in 2007)
- XY100: 100 strategies for life (2004), Hodder Children's Books
- Wise Guides: Family Break Up (2005), Hodder Children's Books
- Oink / Pig in the Middle (2011) Hodder Headline
- Walking With Sausage Dogs (2012) Hodder Headline
- The Unexpected Genius of Pigs (2018) HarperCollins
- The Nice & Accurate Good Omens TV Companion (2019) Headline
- Our Planet (2019) HarperCollins.
- Be More Sausage (2020) HarperCollins
- Failure is an Option (2022) Vertebrate Publishing
Short stories
- Visionary (1992) Minerva (published in New Writing 2 edited by Malcolm Bradbury & Andrew Motion
- crusoe.com (2000) Hodder Headline (published in the New English Library of Internet Short Stories edited by Maxim Jakubowski
- Enfemme (2001) HarperCollins (published in Girls' Night Out/Boys' Night In edited by Jessica Adams, Chris Manby & Fiona Walker
- Eleven Pipers Piping (2006) Virago (published in Twelve Days edited by Shelley Silas
- Eclipsed (2010) Walker Books (published in The Truth is Dead edited by Marcus Sedgwick
- Uplifted (2013) Hot Key Books (published in The Booby Trap edited by Dawn O'Porter)
- Ghost Story (2014) Andersen Press (published in War Girls)
- Eclipsed (2015) Oxford University Press (published in War & Conflict edited by Benjamin Hulme-Cross)
Prizes and awards
- 2004 Booktrust Teenage Prize (shortlist) Boy Kills Man
- 2005 Stockport Schools' Book Award (shortlist) Boy Kills Man
- 2006 De Jonge Jury (Netherlands) (shortlist) Boy Kills Man
- 2006 Wirral Paperback of the Year (shortlist) Boy Kills Man
- 2006 Renfrewshire Teenage Book Award (shortlist) The Wild
- 2007 Wirral Paperback of the Year[8] (longlist) The Wild
- 2013 North East Teenage Book Award (shortlist) The Savages
- 2014 Angus Book Award (winner), the Savages
References
- ↑ "Network: Boys don't cry, they send e-mail". The Independent. Archived from the original on 12 May 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
- ↑ "Matt Whyman: Young people with cancer need better relationship and sex advice". CLIC Sargent. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
- ↑ "BBC Radio 1 - Schedules, Sunday 13 May 2012". BBC. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
- ↑ "Feria del Libro en el Zócalo en México DF – NODAL Cultura". www.nodalcultura.am (in European Spanish). 9 October 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
- ↑ "15th LAGOS BOOK & ART FESTIVAL, LABAF 2013: The Programme". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
- ↑ Huda al-Kibsi (4 September 2007). "Writers work to preserve Yemeni folk tales". Yemen Observer. Retrieved 10 August 2009.
- ↑ Sproull, Patrick (6 November 2015). "Joe Sugg: 'When I said I was doing a graphic novel, a lot of my fans thought it was something sexual...'". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
- ↑ "Matt Whyman".