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Jon Courtenay Grimwood : ウィキペディア英語版
Jon Courtenay Grimwood

Jon Courtenay Grimwood (born 1953 in Valletta, Malta) is a British science fiction and fantasy author.
==Biography==
Grimwood was born in 1953 in Valletta, Malta, grew up in Malta, Britain, Southeast Asia and Norway in the 1960s and 1970s. He studied at Kingston College, then worked in publishing and as a freelance writer for magazines and newspapers including ''The Guardian'', ''The Daily Telegraph'', ''The Times'', and ''The Independent''. He now lives in Paris and Winchester and is married to the journalist and novelist Sam Baker, with a son, Jamie, from a previous marriage.
Much of his early work can be described as post-cyberpunk. He won a British Science Fiction Association award for ''Felaheen'' in 2003,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2003 Award Winners & Nominees )〕 was short-listed for the Arthur C. Clarke Award for ''Pashazade'' the year before,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2002 Award Winners & Nominees )〕 and won the 2006 BSFA award for Best Novel with ''End of the World Blues''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2006 Award Winners & Nominees )〕 He was short-listed for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award in 2002 for ''Pashazade''.〔 His fourth book is loosely based on Stanley Weyman's Victorian novel ''Under the Red Robe''. ''End of the World Blues'' was also short-listed for the 2007 Arthur C. Clarke Award.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2007 Award Winners & Nominees )
The following were nominated in the SF novel category in the Locus Awards – ''Felaheen, The Third Arabesk'', 2004; ''Stamping Butterflies'', 2005; ''9Tail Fox'', 2006; ''End of the World Blues'', 2007.
The French translation of his 2013 literary novel ''The Last Banquet'', written as Jonathan Grimwood, was shortlisted in January 2015 for フランス語:Le Prix Montesquieu,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Le prix littéraire )〕 as ''フランス語:Le Dernier Banquet'', 2014, ''フランス語:Éditions Terra Nova'', translation by Carole Delporte.
Grimwood's work tends to be of a quasi-alternate history genre. In the first four novels, set in the 22nd century, the point of divergence is the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, where Grimwood posits a reality where Napoleon III's France defeats Otto von Bismarck's Prussia, causing the German Empire never to form and the Second French Empire never to collapse. In the ''Arabesk'' trilogy, the point of divergence is in 1915, with Woodrow Wilson brokering an earlier peace so that World War I barely expanded outside of the Balkans; the books are set in a liberal Islamic Ottoman North Africa in the 21st century, mainly centring around El Iskandriya (Alexandria). By contrast, there is little in ''Stamping Butterflies'', ''9tail Fox'' or ''End of the World Blues'' to suggest that the books are not set in our reality.
''The Fallen Blade'' is the first of three novels set in an alternative early-15th century featuring Tycho, fallen angel and assassin, at the Venetian court, in a Venice where Marco Polo's family have been hereditary dukes for five generations and the Mongol emperor Tamberlaine has conquered China, making him the most powerful ruler in the world. The second novel in the Assassini series, ''The Outcast Blade'' was published in 2012, with the third ''The Exiled Blade'' due in Spring 2013. The novels take as a template sequences and tropes from Shakespeare's plays ''Othello'', ''Hamlet'' and ''Romeo and Juliet''.
His first literary novel, ''The Last Banquet'', as Jonathan Grimwood, was published in 2013 by Canongate in the UK and Europa Editions in the US. Referencing Benjamin Franklin, Voltaire and the Marquis de Sade — and picaresque in the style of Candide — it tells the semi magic realist tale of an aristocrat prepared to eat anything, and covers the run up to the French Revolution from the early to late 18th century. The French France 5 critic Gérard Collard called ''Le Dernier Banquet'' "フランス語:le livre de l’année" (the book of the year). It was an NPR Best Book of the Year for 2013〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Last Banquet )〕 ‘Foodies and Francophiles alike will relish this debut novel about Jean-Marie d'Aumout, whom we first meet crunching beetles as a starving orphaned son of nobility in 1723...’〔 In January 2015 it was shortlisted for Le Prix Montesquieu.
Grimwood was guest of honour at Novacon in 2003, at Kontext (in Uppsala, Sweden) in 2008, at Eastercon LX (the 60th British National Science Fiction Convention) in 2009, and at Bristolcon in 2014.
He was a judge for the 2010 Arthur C Clarke Award presented to China Miéville for ''The City & the City''. He was also a judge for the 2011 award presented to Lauren Beukes for ''Zoo City''.

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