John Williams | |
Birth Name: | John Lincoln Williams |
Birth Date: | 12 May 1961 |
Birth Place: | Cardiff, Wales |
Occupation: | Writer |
Notable Works: | The Cardiff Trilogy (1999–2003) |
John Lincoln Williams (born 12 May 1961) is a Welsh writer who has published as John Williams, John L. Williams, and John Lincoln.
Williams was born in Cardiff, where he currently lives, and grew up in a middle-class neighbourhood. In his teens, he joined the punk scene and moved to Camden Town to live in a squat and play in bands.[1] After discovering the works of Elmore Leonard he began writing book reviews for NME and The Sunday Times.[2]
In 1994, Williams published Into the Badlands (1991), a combination of travelogue and interviews with American crime fiction authors, including Elmore Leonard, James Ellroy, Carl Hiaasen, and Sara Paretsky. This was followed in 1994 by Bloody Valentine, a nonfiction account of the killing of sex worker Lynette White in the inner-city district of Butetown.
Five Pubs, Two Bars and a Nightclub (1999), a collection of short stories, was his fiction debut. It became the first volume in the so-called 'Cardiff Trilogy', which includes the novels Cardiff Dead (2000) and The Prince of Wales (2003). He has also written biographies of the singer and Butetown native Dame Shirley Bassey and the Trinidadian Black Power activist Michael X and the Trinidadian historian and writer C.L.R. James.
He writes crime fiction under the name "John Lincoln",
Williams currently writes for The Mail on Sunday and The Independent and is co-organiser of the Laugharne Festival.