Stel Pavlou

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Stel Pavlou
Born November 22, 1970 (1970-11-22) (age 37)
Gillingham, England, United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist, Screenwriter, Short story writer, Actor
Nationality British
Genres Thriller, Speculative Fiction, Science fiction
Subjects History, Mythology, Anthropology, Languages, Genetics

Stelios Grant Pavlou (born November 22, 1970) is a British author and screenwriter.

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[edit] Biography

Stel Pavlou was born in Gillingham, Kent in England, of Greek Cypriot descent. He grew up in Rochester and Chatham, Medway and attended Chatham Grammar School for Boys. The middle child of three, his younger brother is the musician and writer Louis Pavlou.

He met his fiance on MySpace. They were married in 2007.

[edit] Career

A screenwriter and speculative fiction novelist, he is the author of the bestselling Atlantis novel Decipher, released in 2001, and the historical crime thriller Gene, released in 2005. He also has a number of short stories published. His novels are renowned for being meticulously researched, and always include extensive bibliographies, unusual for works of fiction. His books have been published in 12 languages.

Pavlou attended Liverpool Hope University when it was formerly one of the University of Liverpool's colleges. Pavlou's first screenwriting credit was for the film The 51st State (known as Formula 51 in the USA) starring Samuel L. Jackson and Robert Carlyle. In 2006 he ventured into acting starring as Kagan, the lead role in Kochana Cafe. The film premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival. He is currently adapting Arthur C. Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama for Morgan Freeman and David Fincher. He is also rumored to be working on a film adaptation of his first novel, Decipher.

[edit] Works

appeared in Elemental

  • 2006 Checkpoint (short story)

appeared in Doctor Who: Short Trips: The Centenarian

appeared in Doctor Who: Short Trips: Destination Prague

  • 2007 You had me at verify username and password (short story)

appeared in Doctor Who: Short Trips: Snapshots

  • 2008 The Big Uneasy (short story)

appeared in Monster Noir

[edit] External links