Andrew miller author biography page
Biography
Andrew Miller is Special correspondent of The Economist and author of the Back Story column on culture. Previously he was the paper’s Moscow correspondent, Britain editor, Bagehot columnist, International Security editor, correspondent in the American South and Culture editor.
Andrew is the author of “Snowdrops” (2011), a story of moral degradation in Moscow that was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and numerous other awards. “Independence Square”, a novel of revolution set in Kyiv, was published in 2020. His other books include “The Earl of Petticoat Lane” (2006), a memoir about class, immigration and the underwear industry that was shortlisted for the Wingate Prize. In 2014 he won Travel Story of the Year at the Foreign Press Association Media Awards for a piece about 24 hours in a motorway service station.
Visit Andrew Miller’s website
Andrew Miller (writer)
British journalist and author (born 1974)
For the author of the 18th century-set novels Ingenious Pain (1997) and Pure (2011), see Andrew Miller (novelist).
Andrew Miller (born 1974) is a British journalist and author, best known for his debut novel, Snowdrops, published under the name A.D. Miller. He studied literature at Cambridge and Princeton and worked in television before joining The Economist magazine as a reporter in 2000.
Fiction
Snowdrops, an "amorality tale" set in Moscow, was published in 2011. The story is narrated by Nick Platt, a British lawyer working in Russia in the mid-noughties; Platt becomes involved with a woman he meets on the metro and is caught up in a pair of ruthless scams. It was the first novel to be shortlisted for both the Booker Prize for fiction and the CWA Gold Dagger. The novel was also nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Awards, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Galaxy National Book Awards.
Snowdrops received generally favourable reviews. A review in the Independent called it "an electrifying tour of the dark side of Moscow, and of human nature". The Financial Times described it as a "superlative portrait of a country in which everything has its price". The novel was translated into 25 languages. It was selected as a 'book of the year' for 2011 in the Financial Times, the Observer and the Spectator, among other publications.
The Faithful Couple, Miller's second novel, was published in 2015. A review in the Financial Times called it "gripping, affecting and memorable".The Times said it was "studded with little zingers or evocative phrases that encapsulate something bigger". Miller's third novel, Independence Square, set during the Orange Revolution in Kyiv, was published in 2020. In the Spect -Steven Powell, Edgar-winning author of LOVE ME FIERCE IN DANGER, THE LIFE OF JAMES ELLROY Shortlisted by Crime Fiction Lover for Best Indie Crime Novel of 2024 Los Angeles, 2013: Adam Minor and Richie Walsh work at Namaste Mart, a hippie grocery store in West Hollywood frequented by celebrities, cult members, and every variety of absurd character L.A. has to offer. They’re best friends, but couldn’t be more different. Brooding and analytical, Adam dreams of one day becoming a famous novelist. Richie is an unpredictable navy veteran with a weakness for booze, women, and fighting who’s just begun his stand-up comedy career. Adam and Richie also have a special talent: They’re good at finding people. On top of their gig as Hollywood grocery clerks, they supplement their income as unlicensed private detectives on the streets of L.A. A new case arrives: Joan Goldman is a veteran Hollywood actress of 1980s action blockbusters turned entrepreneur, now running a chain of high-end lingerie stores. Shayla Ramsey, one of her top employees, has mysteriously vanished. Joan hires the Grocery Clerk P.I.s to find out what happened. On the trail of the missing Shayla, Adam and Richie encounter the Armenian mob, high-society Pasadena lawyers, and a family of fundamentalist Mormon polygamists led by a devout, wealthy and violent patriarch… British novelist For the author of the Man-Booker nominated 2011 novel Snowdrops, see Andrew Miller (writer). Andrew Brooke MillerFRSL (born 29 April 1960) is an English novelist. Miller was born in Bristol. He grew up in the West Country and has lived in Spain, Japan, Ireland and France. He was educated at Dauntsey's School, and after gaining a first-class degree in English at Middlesex Polytechnic, completed an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia in 1991. In 1995 he wrote a PhD in Critical and Creative Writing at Lancaster University. For his first book Ingenious Pain he received three awards, the James Tait Black Memorial Award for Fiction, the International Dublin Literary Award; and the Grinzane Cavour Prize in Italy. The book has been translated into 36 languages. Miller currently lives in Witham Friary in Somerset with his daughter Frieda. “Namaste Mart Confidential heralds the arrival of a distinctive new voice in crime fiction. It’s a wild tale of wannabe private dicks, twisted religious nuts, psychopathic Armenian gangsters and crazed celebrity-chasers. And those are just the likeable characters! Andrew Miller is a talent to watch.”
Check out RED SWARM—Andrew’s latest short story in issue #5 of STARLITE PULP REVIEW
Andrew participated in the 2nd annual Twentynine Palms Book Festival
Nevada McPherson review of Namaste Mart Confidenti
Andrew Miller (novelist)
Life and career
Bibliography
Awards
References
External links