Stephen Clarke (writer)
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Stephen Clarke (born 1958) is a British journalist and novelist.
Before publishing his novels, Clarke wrote comedy sketches for BBC Radio 4 and jokes for a stand-up comedian. He also wrote comic-book stories for the U.S. cartoonist and comics artist Gilbert Shelton. He spent several years working in Glasgow as a bilingual lexicographer for the dictionary firm HarperCollins. He then moved to Paris, France to work for a French press group, and has now lived there for more than a decade.
On April 1, 2004 Clarke self-published three novels, under three different names, in editions of 200 copies each, intending to sell them through his website or give them away to friends. He describes these books as "seriously funny", "comedies with a message". The titles, all issued under the imprint "Red Garage Books", were:
- A Year in the Merde (its title an allusion to Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence) by Paul West (who is in fact the first person narrator of the novel).
- Beam Me Up, or A Brief History of the Future (a novel about teleportation) by Stephen Clarke (ISBN 2-9521638-0-4);
- Who Killed Beano? A Genetically Modified Murder Mystery by Chris Kent (a—fictitious—female author who, it was alleged, tragically drowned in a diving accident shortly after the completion of the book) (ISBN 2-9521638-2-0); and
However, A Year in the Merde became a word-of-mouth must-have book in Paris, especially after it had been reviewed in a French newspaper. Eventually, Clarke decided to sell the rights to "real publishers" (Transworld in the UK, Bloomsbury Publishing PLC in the United States, Penguin in Canada, and Random House in Australia). In France, the novel is published by Nil Editions and entitled God Save La France.
A sequel to A Year in the Merde, entitled Merde Actually (a reference to the romantic comedy Love Actually), was published in 2005. It was released as In the Merde for Love in the United States. He has also now published Talk to the Snail in 2006, essentially a survivor's guide to the French language and the French themselves.