Glen Duncan is a British author born in 1965 in Bolton, Lancashire, England[1] to an Anglo-Indian family. He studied philosophy and literature at the universities of Lancaster and Exeter.

In 1990 Duncan moved to London, where he worked as a bookseller for four years, writing in his spare time. In 1994 he visited India with his father[2] (part roots odyssey, part research for a later work, The Bloodstone Papers) before continuing on to the United States, where he spent several months travelling the country by Amtrak train, writing much of what would become his first novel, Hope, published to critical acclaim on both sides of the Atlantic in 1997.

His novel I, Lucifer was published in 2002. The premise of the book is that Lucifer has been given a month to live in mortal form to get himself back into God's good graces before the end of the world. The film rights have been sold. The book was provided with a "soundtrack" by Duncan's longtime friend Stephen Coates and his band The Real Tuesday Weld, a cross-platform collaboration repeated for Duncan's book The Last Werewolf. The pair have toured and performed at various live events and festivals together including at the British Film Institute.

According to critic William Skidelsky in The Observer, Duncan "specialises in writing novels that can't easily be pigeon-holed".[3] Similarly, David Robson in The Daily Telegraph has noted that Duncan is "an idiosyncratic talent", adding,"You never know quite which way he is going to turn."[4]

In 2013, Glen Duncan took the pseudonym of Saul Black to publish a thriller, The Killing Lessons, in 2015.[5]

Bibliography

  • Hope (1997)
  • Love Remains (2000)
  • I, Lucifer (2002)
  • Weathercock (2003)
  • Death of an Ordinary Man (2004)
  • The Bloodstone Papers (2006)
  • A Day And A Night And A Day (2009)
  • The Last Werewolf (April 2011)
  • Talulla Rising (June 2012)
  • By Blood We Live (February 2014)

Valerie Hart series

Published under the pseudonym Saul Black:

  • The Killing Lessons (2015)
  • LoveMurder (2016)
  • Anything for You (2019)

References

  1. British Council. "Glen Duncan | British Council Literature". Contemporarywriters.com. Archived from the original on 16 December 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  2. Duncan, Glen (18 November 2007). "Lives". The New York Times. Delhi (India); London (England). Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  3. Skidelsky, William (15 March 2009). "William Skidelsky meets Glen Duncan, the man in black". The Observer. London. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  4. Robson, David (1 August 2004). "Funeral wrongs". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  5. Campbell. Lisa (11 October 2013). "Killing Lessons' author revealed Glenn Duncan". The Bookseller. London. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
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