Sam Byers Explained

Sam Byers
Birth Date:1979
Occupation:Novelist
Language:English
Alma Mater:University of East Anglia
Awards:Betty Trask Award (2014)
Website:www.sambyers.co.uk

Sam Byers (born 1979) is a British novelist.[1] He was born in Bury St Edmunds and now lives in Norwich, where he studied at the University of East Anglia (MA Creative Writing, 2004; PhD, 2014).[2]

Byers' debut novel Idiopathy, a satire based on the spread of a BSE-like disease,[3] received a Betty Trask Award and the Waterstones 11 prize. Idiopathy was also shortlisted for the 2013 Costa Book Awards First Novel award, and longlisted for the 2014 Desmond Elliott Prize.

In 2018 Byers published his second novel, Perfidious Albion, "a new media satire that switches into a hi-tech dystopia centred on class politics."[4]

In 2021 he published his third novel, Come Join Our Disease.[5]

Awards

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Waterstones 11: Interview with Sam Byers. The Daily Telegraph. 14 January 2013 . 18 October 2014.
  2. Web site: Creative Writing alumni A-C and published works. University of East Anglia.
  3. News: Debut author: Sam Byers . The Guardian . 21 April 2013 . 7 February 2019 . Kappala-Ramsamy . Gemma .
  4. News: Perfidious Albion by Sam Byers – review . The Guardian . 29 July 2018 . 7 February 2019 . Cummins . Anthony .
  5. News: Myerson . Jonathan . 2021-04-05 . Come Join Our Disease by Sam Byers review – gloriously nauseating . 2024-04-22 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.