Joseph Connolly (author)
Joseph Connolly (born 23 March 1950) is a British journalist, novelist, non-fiction writer and bibliophile. His son is Charles Connolly a musician based in Hampstead, London.
For many years Connolly was the proprietor of The Flask Bookshop in Hampstead. Having started writing fiction rather late in life, he is best known today for his comic novels, especially in France, where they have been translated by Alain Defossé. He also contributes to The Times and various other publications.
Connolly lives in Hampstead.
Novels[]
- (1995)
- This Is It (1996)
- (1997)
- Summer Things (1998) (filmed in France in 2002 by Michel Blanc as Embrassez qui vous voudrez starring Charlotte Rampling, Jacques Dutronc and Carole Bouquet)
- (1999)
- (2000)
- S.O.S. (2001)
- (2003)
- (2005)
- (2007)
- England's Lane (2012)
- Boys and Girls (2014)
- Style (2015)
- This is 64 (2017)
His novels are published by Faber and Faber except England's Lane, Boys and Girls, Style and This is 64 which are published by Quercus.[1]
Non-fiction[]
- Collecting Modern First Editions (1977) (a standard work on book collecting)
- Modern First Editions: Their Value to Collectors (1984)
- Children's Modern First Editions: Their Value to Collectors (1988)
- P.G. Wodehouse (1979) (biography)
- Jerome K. Jerome (1982) (biography)
- Beside the Seaside (1999)
- All Shook Up: A Flash of the Fifties (2000)
- Christmas And How to Survive It: Laughter Matters (2003)
- Eighty Years of Book Cover Design (2009)[2]
- The A-Z of Eating Out (2014)
References and external links[]
- Official JosephConnolly.co.uk, official website
- Joseph Connolly at IMDb
- Forces.org, "Sharing an Ashtray with ... Joseph Connolly" (interview)
- Hasweb.org, The Hampstead Authors' Society
- Thecnj.com, A review of Love Is Strange from the Camden New Journal (includes author photograph)
- Findarticles.com[permanent dead link], Joseph Connolly on Kingsley Amis (The Independent, 20 August 2005)
- Joseph Connolly on Journalisted
- Ham and High Charles Connolly in the Hampstead High.
Notes[]
- ^ "English Publications" josephconnolly.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
- ^ Conrad, Peter (12 July 2009). "This time you can judge all you like". The Observer. Guardian News and Media. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
Categories:
- 1950 births
- Living people
- People from Hampstead
- 20th-century English novelists
- 21st-century English novelists
- English male journalists
- English male novelists
- 20th-century English male writers
- 21st-century English male writers