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Matt Whyman : ウィキペディア英語版
Matt Whyman

Matt Whyman is a British novelist, also known for his work as an advice columnist for numerous teenage magazines.
==Biography==
Matt Whyman is a young-adult novelist and a long-standing advice columnist for many teenage magazines. Born in 1969, he grew up in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, and has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia (1992). Since then, he has taught creative writing projects across the UK, and for the British Council in Russia and the Middle East.
Matt achieved an X (Did not finish) and a D on his A-levels. After school he visited a career adviser, who listed a number of jobs, one of which as a Wireman. Matt misinterpreted this to be his surname and said "Yes, I'm a Wireman". He was given a job creating night-vision cameras to be fitted to German fighter jets, and worked copying the man next to him. Each did not work, however, but they were still sent to Germany. Meanwhile, his mother had been secretly applying for University places for Matt. When he saw that a German fighter jet had crashed because of a problem with its night-vision camera, Matt immediately quit (despite the fact that he knew it could not have been one of his productions). His mother announced that she had been applying for University places, and Matt took one in Film Production, which he found difficult and limited. This inspired him to write, because writing has a "Limitless budget".
In 1995, Matt became the first male advice columnist for 19 magazine. He went on to hold a 10-year residency as AOL UK's online agony uncle, and has created many national health awareness campaigns for BBC Radio 1 and Brook Advisory, among others. He also writes widely on teenage issues for magazines, websites and newspapers, and often appears on radio and television in this role. He co-presented a series of ITV's controversial Saturday morning sex and relationships show, ''Love Bites'', and is currently the agony uncle for ''Bliss'', one of the UK's best-selling magazines for girls.
Currently he is a relationship advisor for askTheSite, official spokesperson for TheSite.org - a UK advice and information resource for 16- to 24-year-olds - and a monthly contributor to ''Marie Claire''.
Whyman's first novels were for adults: ''Man or Mouse'' (2000), and ''Columbia Road'' (2002). Both titles are romantic comedies that address the impact of technology on relationships. He has since written much darker works of fiction, often set outside the UK, as well as non-fiction titles for teenagers. He has also contributed short stories to a number of anthologies, and was a judge for the 2005 Booktrust Teenage Prize.
His teenage novels are: ''Superhuman'' (2003); ''Boy Kills Man'' (2004), a critically acclaimed story of Colombian child assassins, which is published in translation around the world and currently being adapted for film; ''The Wild'' (2005), a novella set in Kazakhstan and Russia; and ''So Below'' (2005), for younger readers - an urban fantasy novel set under the streets of London. ''Inside the Cage'' (2007), is an Arctic-based thriller about teenage hackers and CIA ghost flights. His latest novels are ''Street Runner'' (2008); ''Goldstrike'' (2009); and ''Icecore'' (2009).
He has also written several non-fiction advice books, including a set of 'Wise Guides' on subjects such as smoking, drinking and family break up. ''XY: A Toolkit for Life'' (2002) and ''XY100'': one hundred strategies for life (2004).
Matt Whyman lives in West Sussex. He is married with four children.

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