Ken Follett

Ken Follett
Born Kenneth Martin Follett
(1949-06-05) 5 June 1949
Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist
Nationality British
Alma mater University College London
Period 1974–present
Genre Thriller, spy novel, historical fiction
Notable works Eye of the Needle
The Key to Rebecca
The Pillars of the Earth
World Without End
Whiteout
The Century Trilogy
Spouse Mary Emma Ruth Elson 1968-1985
Barbara Follett (born Daphne Barbara Hubbard) 1985-11-08 - present[1]
Children Adam Broer (Stepson)
Emanuele Follett
Marie-Claire Follett
Jann Turner (Stepdaughter)
Kim Turner (Stepdaughter)
Website
www.ken-follett.com

Kenneth Martin "Ken" Follett (born 5 June 1949) is a Welsh author of thrillers and historical novels who has sold more than 150 million copies of his works.[2] Many of his books have reached number 1 on the New York Times Best Seller list, including Edge of Eternity, Fall of Giants, A Dangerous Fortune, The Key to Rebecca, Lie Down with Lions, Triple, Winter of the World, and World Without End.[3]

Biography

Early life

Follett was born on 5 June 1949 in Cardiff, Wales. He was the first child of Martin Follett, a tax inspector, and Lavinia (Veenie) Follett, who went on to have three more children.[4][5] Barred from watching films and television by his Plymouth Brethren parents, he developed an early interest in reading but remained an indifferent student until he entered his teens.[4][5] His family moved to London when he was ten years old, and he began applying himself to his studies at Harrow Weald Grammar School and Poole Technical College. He won admission in 1967 to University College London, where he studied philosophy and became involved in centre-left politics.

Marriage and early success

He married Mary, in 1968, and their son Emanuele was born in the same year. After graduation in the autumn of 1970, Follett took a three-month post-graduate course in journalism and went to work as a trainee reporter in Cardiff on the South Wales Echo. In 1973 Ken and Mary's daughter, Marie-Claire, was born. After three years in Cardiff, he returned to London as a general-assignment reporter for the Evening News. Finding the work unchallenging, he eventually left journalism for publishing and became, by the late 1970s, deputy managing director of the small London publisher Everest Books.[4] He also began writing fiction during evenings and weekends as a hobby. Later, he said he began writing books when he needed extra money to fix his car, and the publisher's advance a fellow journalist had been paid for a thriller was the sum required for the repairs.[6] Success came gradually at first, but the publication of Eye of the Needle in 1978 made him both wealthy and internationally famous, which became an international bestseller and sold over 10 million copies.[7]

Further successes

Each of Follett's subsequent novels has also become a best-seller, ranking high on the New York Times best-seller list; a number have been adapted for the screen.

Ken Follett has written 29 books. The first five best-sellers were spy thrillers: Eye of the Needle (1978), Triple (1979), The Key to Rebecca (1980), The Man from St. Petersburg (1982) and Lie Down with Lions (1986). On Wings of Eagles (1983) was the true story of how two of Ross Perot's employees were rescued from Iran during the revolution of 1979.

He then surprised readers with The Pillars of the Earth (1989), a novel about building a cathedral in a small English village during the Middle Ages. It received rave reviews and was on the New York Times best-seller list for 18 weeks. It also topped best-seller lists in Canada, Britain and Italy, and was on the German best-seller list for six years. It has sold 18 million copies so far.

The next three novels, Night Over Water (1991), A Dangerous Fortune (1993) and A Place Called Freedom (1995) were more historical than thriller, but he returned to the thriller genre with The Third Twin (1996) which in the Publishing Trends annual survey of international fiction best-sellers for 1997 was ranked no. 2 worldwide, after John Grisham's The Partner. His next work, The Hammer of Eden (1998), was another contemporary suspense story followed by a Cold War thriller, Code to Zero (2000).

Ken Follett with his book Eisfieber (English: Whiteout) in October 2005.

Follett returned to the World War II era with his next two novels, Jackdaws (2001), a thriller about a group of women parachuted into France to destroy a vital telephone exchange – which won the Corine Prize for 2003 – and Hornet Flight (2002), about a daring young Danish couple who escape to Britain from occupied Denmark in a rebuilt Hornet Moth biplane with vital information about German radar. Whiteout (2004), is a contemporary thriller about the theft of a deadly virus from a research lab.

World Without End (2007) is the sequel to Pillars of the Earth. The book returns to Kingsbridge two hundred years later, and features the descendants of the characters in 'Pillars'. It focuses on the destinies of a handful of people as their lives are devastated by the Black Death, the plague that swept Europe from the middle of the fourteenth century.

He has had a number of novels made into movies and TV mini series: On Wings of Eagles (1986), Pillars of the Earth (2010), World Without End (2012), and, in 2016, A Dangerous Fortune.[8]

Century trilogy

Follett's next three novels, Fall of Giants, Winter of the World and Edge of Eternity, make up the Century trilogy. Fall of Giants (2010) followed the fates of five interrelated families - American, German, Russian, English and Welsh - as they moved through the world-shaking dramas of the First World War, the Russian Revolution and the struggle for women's suffrage. Fall of Giants, published simultaneously in 14 countries, was internationally popular and topped several best-seller lists.[9]

Winter of the World (2012) picks up where the first book left off, as its five interrelated families enter a time of enormous social, political, and economic turmoil, beginning with the rise of the Third Reich, through the Spanish Civil War and the great dramas of World War II, to the explosions of the American and Soviet atom bombs and the beginning of the long Cold War.

The final novel in the 'Century' trilogy, Edge of Eternity, which follows those families through the events of the last half of the 20th century, was published on 16 September 2014. Like the previous two books, it chronicles the lives of five families through the Cold war and civil-rights movements.[10]

Future project

Ken Follett's next project is already underway. Ken's next novel, provisionally titled 'A Column of Fire', will form the 'Kingsbridge' trilogy with The Pillars of the Earth and World Without End.

"It is a spy story set in the sixteenth century, during the reign of Elizabeth I of England. There were many assassination plots against the Queen, so the people around her set up an espionage system to foil those sixteenth-century terrorists. This was the beginning of the British secret service that eventually gave us James Bond."

Follett announced this while on a research trip to Seville, Spain. The book will be published in autumn 2017.[11]

Appearances and adaptations in other media

Eye of the Needle was made into an acclaimed film, starring Donald Sutherland, and six novels have been made into television mini-series: The Key to Rebecca, Lie Down with Lions, On Wings of Eagles, The Third Twin – the rights for which were sold to CBS for $US1,400,000, a record price at the time – and The Pillars of the Earth and World Without End. These last two have been screened in several languages in many countries. Ken Follett also had a cameo role as the valet in The Third Twin and later as a merchant in The Pillars of the Earth.

Public life

Ken Follett is a member of various organisations that promote literacy and writing, and is actively involved in various organisations in his home town of Stevenage.

He is active in numerous Stevenage charities and was a governor of Roebuck Primary School for ten years, serving as the Chair of Governors for four of those years.

On 15 September 2010, Follett, along with 54 other public figures, signed an open letter published in The Guardian stating their opposition to Pope Benedict XVI's state visit to the UK.[14]

He has also donated £25,000 to the Yvette Cooper campaign in the Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2015,[15] as well as another £25,000 from his wife Barbara Follett[16]

Ken Follet's archival papers are housed at the Saginaw Valley State University in Michigan United States. Papers include outlines, first drafts, notes and correspondence, original manuscripts and copies of early books now out of print.[17]

Awards

Personal life

Follett became involved, during the late 1970s, in the activities of Britain's Labour Party. In the course of his political activities, he met the former Barbara Broer, a Labour Party official, who became his second wife in 1984. She was elected as a Member of Parliament in 1997, representing Stevenage. She was re-elected in both 2001 and in 2005, but did not run in the 2010 general election.[22] Follett himself remains a prominent Labour supporter and fundraiser as well as a prominent Blairite. In 2010, he was the largest donor to Ed Balls's campaign to become leader of the Labour Party, saying:

"Ed Balls is the only Labour leadership candidate who offers a path to economic growth; his time at the treasury, with low borrowing and high growth, shows he is the true candidate of the centre in this leadership election."

Ken is an amateur musician playing bass guitar for 'Damn Right I Got the Blues', and appears occasionally with the folk group 'Clog Iron' playing a bass balalaika.[23]

Bibliography

Follett statue in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain.

Apples Carstairs series (as Simon Myles)

Piers Roper series

Kingsbridge series

The Century Trilogy

Standalone novels

Non-fiction

References

  1. "Ken Follett Biography". IMDB. Retrieved 2016-03-01.
  2. "Ken Follett - Master Storyteller and Best-Selling Author".
  3. "Ken Follett".New York Times List of Number One Best Sellers
  4. 1 2 3 "Ken Follett". WNYC. 7 December 2003. Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  5. 1 2 "The early years ...". Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  6. Itzkoff, Dave (21 July 2010). "No Money to Fix Your Car? Write a Best Seller". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-07-22.
  7. "FOLLETT, KEN | List Of Writers". www.literaturewales.org. Retrieved 2016-01-15.
  8. "Ken Follett". IMDb. Retrieved 2016-01-15.
  9. http://ken-follett.com/downloads/biography/Ken_Follett_biography_en_1209.pdf
  10. svetlanalasrado (23 September 2014). "Follett tweaks beststeller formula".
  11. Immelman, Greig Stewart, Martin. "Ken Follett - News & Views".
  12. "Ken Follett » Greater Talent Network Speakers Bureau".
  13. "Charley Boorman's visit to young offenders". 19 February 2009.
  14. "Letters: Harsh judgments on the pope and religion". The Guardian. London. 15 September 2010. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  15. "The Electoral Commission (donations search)". Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  16. "The Electoral Commission (donations search)". Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  17. "Ken Follett | Biography | Archives". Ken Follett. Retrieved 2016-01-15.
  18. http://www.que-leer.com/19675/maria-duenas-y-ken-follett-premios-que-leer-de-los-lectores.html
  19. "Goodreads".
  20. Multimedia, Spiral. "FUNDACIÓN CATEDRAL SANTA MARÍA KATEDRALA FUNDAZIOA - VISITS, MEDIA LIBRARY, PRESS, BLOG...".
  21. http://www.premiobancarella.info/bancarella/albo.php
  22. "MP Follett to repay largest sum". BBC News. 4 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-22.
  23. "Ken Follett | Biography". Ken Follett. Retrieved 2016-01-15.
  24. "Ken Follett | A Column of Fire". Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  25. "Winter of the World, by Ken Follett".
  26. Follett rewrote this book after two translators had failed to produce a publishable version of the original French work. He has tried to keep it from being published under his name and disowns it entirely, entreating readers not to buy it.
  27. Translation from original French version.

Further reading

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