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Ian Thomson (author) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ian Thomson (writer)
Ian Thomson (born 1961) is an English author, best known for his biography ''Primo Levi'' (2002), and reportage, ''The Dead Yard: Tales of Modern Jamaica'' (2009)
== Biography ==

Ian Thomson was born in London in 1961. His parents moved to New York that same year, where his father worked for a Wall Street bank. (His mother, a Baltic émigrée, came to England in 1947 at the age of seventeen.) Thomson was educated at Dulwich College, then at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he read English. Subsequently he taught English literature and English as a foreign language in Rome, then became a translator, journalist and writer, contributing to the ''Sunday Times Magazine'', ''The Independent'', ''The Guardian'', ''The Observer'', ''The Spectator'' and ''Times Literary Supplement''. He was Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University College London. Currently he is a Senior Lecturer in Creative Non-Fiction at the University of East Anglia. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
His first important book, ''Bonjour Blanc: A Journey Through Haiti'' (1992), an amalgam of history and adventure, was recommended by J. G. Ballard as “hair-raising but hugely entertaining”, and by the film director Jonathan Demme as “a great and abiding classic”. His book, ''Primo Levi'' (2002),〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ )〕 a biography, took ten years to write and is seen today as the definitive life of the Italian writer and concentration camp survivor. It won the Royal Society of Literature’s W. H.Heinemann Award and was shortlisted for the ''Jewish Quarterly''′s Wingate Literary Prize and the Koret Jewish Book Award.
In 2005 Ian Thomson went back to the West Indies to write the ''The Dead Yard: Tales of Modern Jamaica'' (2009),〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/audio/2010/jul/09/travel-writing-prize )〕 seen now as one of the most controversial books written on Jamaica. In 2010 it was awarded the Royal Society of Literature’s Ondaatje Prize〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/may/25/ian-thomson-wins-ondaatje-prize )〕 as well as the Dolman Travel Book Award. Zadie Smith spoke in ''Harper’s Magazine'' of an "excellent book".
Ian Thomson edited ''Articles of Faith: The Collected Tablet Journalism of Graham Greene'' (2006), and contributed a short story to ''Kingston Noir'' (2012), a collection of fiction set in the Jamaican capital by various contemporary writers. In 2011, he donated the memoir, ''Fall and Rise of a Rome Patient'', to Oxfam’s ‘OxTravel’ project, a collection of UK articles by 36 travel writers. Ian Thomson has translated the Sicilian crime writer Leonardo Sciascia into English, and has lectured at Columbia University, Princeton University and the Royal Society, London.
He lives in London with his wife and children.

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