Charles Cumming
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Charles Cumming | |
---|---|
Born | 1971 (age 52–53) Ayr, Scotland |
Education | Eton College University of Edinburgh |
Occupation(s) | Novelist and Screenwriter |
Spouse | Harriette Peel |
Children | 3 |
Website | www.charlescumming.co.uk |
Charles Cumming (born 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction and a screenwriter.
Early life and education
Cumming was born in 1971,[1] in Ayr, Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he earned a first class honours degree in English Literature.[1]
In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's
Career
Cumming's first novel, A Spy by Nature, was published in the UK in June 2001. The novel's hero, Alec Milius, is a flawed loner in his early 20s who is instructed by
In August 2001, Cumming moved to
His third novel, The Spanish Game (2006), marks the return of
Typhoon, published in the UK in 2008, is a political thriller about a CIA plot to destabilise China on the eve of the
Cumming's fifth novel,
A Foreign Country, his sixth novel, concerning the disappearance of the first female Chief of MI6, was published in 2012. It is the first in a trilogy of novels about disgraced MI6 officer Thomas Kell. The novel is being developed into a television series by Bluegrass Films. A Foreign Country was named the first
A sequel, entitled A Colder War, in which Kell investigates a traitor inside western intelligence, was published in 2014. The novel won the CrimeFest eDunnit Award for Best Crime eBook of the Year.[4][5]
The third novel in the Thomas Kell series, A Divided Spy, was published in 2016.
Cumming's ninth novel, The Man Between, was published in 2018. Released in the United States as The Moroccan Girl, it tells the story of a writer who agrees to spy for MI6 while attending a literary festival in Morocco. This was followed up in 2020 by BOX88, a thriller set in both the present day and in 1989. The protagonist, Lachlan Kite, is recruited into a top secret UK and US intelligence network while attending Alford, a fictional public school modelled on Eton College. A sequel, JUDAS62 was published in the UK in 2021. Now a university student, Kite is sent to the Russian city of Voronezh in 1993 to extract a chemical weapons scientist. In the present day he mounts an operation against the FSB in Dubai.
Cumming's novels have been translated into fourteen languages. His work is published in the United Kingdom by HarperCollins, in the United States by Mysterious Press and in Spain by Salamandra.
In 2015, Cumming sold an original screenplay, The Plane, to DiBonaventura Pictures. The film was released by
Cumming was also an assistant editor of The Week from 1996 to 2013.
Personal life
Cumming lives in west London.[6] He is married and has three children.
He is one of the trustees of The Pierce Loughran Memorial Scholarship fund, which provides tuition fees for the
Bibliography
- A Spy by Nature (2001), ISBN 0-14-029476-7, the first Alec Milius novel
- The Hidden Man (2003), ISBN 0-14-029477-5
- The Spanish Game (2006), ISBN 0-14-101783-X, the second Alec Milius novel
- Typhoon (2008), ISBN 0-14-101802-X
- The Trinity Six (2010), ISBN 0-312-67529-1
- A Foreign Country (2012), ISBN 0-00-733783-3, the first Thomas Kell novel
- A Colder War (2014), ISBN 0-00-746747-8, the second Thomas Kell novel
- A Divided Spy (2016), ISBN 0-00-746751-6, the third Thomas Kell novel
- The Man Between (2018), ISBN 0-00-820031-9, published in the US as The Moroccan Girl (2019)
- BOX 88 (2020), ISBN 978-0-00-820036-7
- JUDAS 62 (2021), ISBN 978-0-00-836346-8
- KENNEDY 35 (2023) ISBN 978-0-00-836352-9third in box 88 series
References
- ^ a b c "About Charles Cumming". charlescumming.co.uk. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
- ^ "Charles Cumming | British Council". www.britishcouncil.ru. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
- ^ "Charles Cumming wins the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger". Janklow & Nesbit. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
- ^ "A Foreign Country by Charles Cumming named Scottish Crime Book of Year". BBC News. 17 September 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
- ^ "Too many red-heads". Bloody Scotland News. 18 September 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
- ^ Mikhailova, Anna (12 October 2014). "Fame & Fortune: Banks made Wonga look like Red Cross". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
- ^ "About Charles Cumming, Author". Archived from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2019.