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・ Kevin Sorbo
・ Kevin Sorenson
・ Kevin Sorrell
・ Kevin Soucie
・ Kevin Sousa
・ Kevin Sousa (chef)
・ Kevin Sousa (footballer)
・ Kevin Souter
・ Kevin Souza
・ Kevin Spacey
・ Kevin Spencer
・ Kevin Sammut
・ Kevin Sample
・ Kevin Sampsell
・ Kevin Sampson
Kevin Sampson (writer)
・ Kevin Sanasy
・ Kevin Sanders
・ Kevin Sandher
・ Kevin Sandkuhler
・ Kevin Sandoval
・ Kevin Sandwith
・ Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo
・ Kevin Santamaría
・ Kevin Santos
・ Kevin Sargent
・ Kevin Sargent (American football)
・ Kevin Sargent (composer)
・ Kevin Satchell
・ Kevin Satchwell


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Kevin Sampson (writer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Kevin Sampson (writer)

Kevin Sampson is a British novelist, best known for his novels ''Awaydays'' (1998), ''Powder'' (1999) and ''Stars Are Stars'' (2006). He lives in Birkenhead, Merseyside. His crime thriller, ''The Killing Pool'', was published by Cape on 21 March 2013.
==Career==
Sampson began writing gig reviews for NME in the 80s, though was famously sacked by Editor Neil Spencer for reviewing a Sex Gang Children concert at a Liverpool club that had been burned down on the night the band had been due to appear. He went on to contribute regularly to The Face, Arena, i-D, Sounds, Jamming, The Observer and Time Out before joining Channel Four as an assistant editor for Youth Programmes.
He left C4 to set up Kinesis Films, a company that specialised in documentaries about subcultures (notably ''Sole of the Nation'', a film about Dr. Martens boots, and ''Ibiza - A Short Film About Chilling''). Sampson returned to Merseyside in 1990 to help long-time friend Peter Hooton set up Produce Records with partners Ian Croft, Wayne Chand, Barney Moores and Paul McKenna. Produce enjoyed a string of Top 40 hits in the early 1990s, including The Farm's "Groovy Train" and "All Together Now."
When The Farm broke up in 1994, Sampson dug out the manuscript to a novella he had sent to Penguin in 1982. ''Awaydays'' was based on what he saw during his youth, travelling to, and at, football grounds up and down the country. Inspired by Irvine Welsh's phenomenal debut ''Trainspotting'', Sampson re-worked the novel, which was acquired by publisher Dan Franklin at Jonathan Cape. ''Awaydays'' was an immediate critical and commercial success on its release in 1998. Sampson's second novel, ''Powder'', reflects some of his experiences of the music business with The Farm and Produce Records, and subsequent adventures in Ibiza, and working for Richard Branson's V2 Music.
''Awaydays'' was adapted to film in 2009.〔(Awaydays ) at the Internet Movie Database〕 He writes about his involvement in the Ibiza film ''A Short Film About Chilling'' in the Summer 2010 Umbrella Magazine's Issue 1 〔(Umbrella Magazine )〕 and a film version of ''Powder'' was released August 2011. ''Surveillance'', a film from one of Sampson's original screenplays, was in competition at the Berlinale's "Panorama" section in 2008, and his forthcoming crime thriller ''Gangsterland'' is under option with Red Union Films.

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