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Peter Ackroyd

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Peter Ackroyd (born October 5 1949 in London) is a British author.

Ackroyd won a double first in English at Clare College, Cambridge as an undergraduate and was a Mellon Fellow at Yale University, in the United States.

His career started in poetry, including works such as London Lickpenny (1973) and The Diversions of Purley (1987). He later moved into fiction and has become an acclaimed author, including shortlisting for the Booker Prize in 1987.

Ackroyd worked at The Spectator magazine between 1973 and 1977 and became joint managing editor in 1978. He was nominated a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1984 and is currently a regular radio broadcaster and book critic.

Ackroyd has always shown a great interest in the city of London and one of his most recent works, London: The Biography, is an extensive and thorough discussion of London through the ages. In 2002 he followed this with the monumental cultural history of England, Albion: The Origins of the English Imagination.

From 2003 to 2005, Ackroyd wrote a six-book non-fiction series (Voyages Through Time), intended for readers as young as eight. This was his first work for children. The criticallly acclaimed series (Not just sound-bite snacks for short attention spans, but unfolding feasts that leave you with a sense of wonder, Sunday Times) is an extensive narrative of key periods in world history.

Works

Fiction

Adult Non-fiction

Children's non-fiction (Voyages Through Time series)

Plays

Television / documentary

BBC unless otherwise noted

External links

See also

 


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