FELICITY BRYAN ASSOCIATES
Literary Agency


               

AUTHORS REPRESENTED BY CATHERINE CLARKE

JAMES ATTLEE is the author of the widely acclaimed Isolarion: A Different Oxford Journey (Chicago University Press, 2007; 'he had me purring from the word go' Geoff Dyer, Guardian). His new book, Nocturne: A Journey in Search of Moonlight, published by Hamish Hamilton in March 2011, takes the reader on a mind-expanding tour of our relationship with moonlight, via Japan, Naples and Siena, the Arizona desert, Spandau Prison, and some wilder reaches of Britain. "Spellbinding… Nocturne is an inspiration. It makes you want to pull a chair out into the garden and bathe in the moonlight.’ - New York Times. www.jamesattlee.com.

JAMES BARR got a brilliant First in history from Oxford and went on to write editorials for the Daily Telegraph. He now works in the City. His book Setting the Desert on Fire: The Arab Revolt of 1916 follows the group of people, including Lawrence of Arabia, behind a hugely important but little-known event in Middle eastern history. It is published by Bloomsbury in the UK and Norton in the US. His new book is A Line in the Sand, on the European rivalries over the Middle East from the end of WWI to 1948, and was published by Simon and Schuster in August 2011. www.jamesbarr.org.uk

ROSAMUND BARTLETT is the author of the wonderful Tolstoy: A Russian Life, published in November 2010 by Profile Books to excellent review coverage. Profile have translation rights. US: Harcourt. Longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize; shortlisted for the Spears Biography Prize. www.rosamundbartlett.com

ERICA BENNER is a visiting fellow at Yale University and has held posts at Oxford, Berlin Freie Universitat, and the LSE. She is writing Be Like the Fox: Conversations with Machiavelli, which will decode the author of The Prince in such a way that we will see him in an entirely different light. Allen Lane/Penguin Press have acquired world English rights, for publication in 2014.

CLAIRE BERTSCHINGER is the International Red Cross nurse who was in Ethiopia during the terrible famine in the 1980s and who touched the world's hearts and conscience when Michael Buerk made a film for the BBC about her work with starving children. Her story Moving Mountains, written with Fanny Blake, includes stints in Afghanistan and Beirut and is harrowing but enormously uplifting. She is much in demand as a public speaker and has been given the Woman of the Year Award and the International Award for Human Rights in Ethics and Nursing, among others and was made a Dame in the 2010 New Year Honours.

CLAIRE BERTSCHINGER is the International Red Cross nurse who was in Ethiopia during the terrible famine in the 1980s and who touched the world's hearts and conscience when Michael Buerk made a film for the BBC about her work with starving children. Her story Moving Mountains, written with Fanny Blake, includes stints in Afghanistan and Beirut and is harrowing but enormously uplifting. She is much in demand as a public speaker and has been given the Woman of the Year Award and the International Award for Human Rights in Ethics and Nursing, among others and was made a Dame in the 2010 New Year Honours.

SIMON BLACKBURN is Professor of Philosophy at Cambridge University and the author of the bestselling Dictionary of Philosophy, Think, and Being Good (OUP), which have appeared in 15 languages. His book Lust, one of the Seven Deadly Sins series from OUP, garnered fantastic coverage in the media on publication in 2004. His Truth: A Guide for the Perplexed, a guidebook to philosophical ideas about truth and its distortions, from classical times to the present, is published by Penguin Press and Oxford University Press in the USA. His Plato’s Republic for Grove Atlantic has sold in 14 territories. His The Big Questions: Philosophy is published by Quercus.

SUSAN BRIGDEN is a Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. Her New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors 1485-1603 (Penguin Press, 2000) garnered fabulous acclaim. Her new book is In Kent and Christendom: Wyatt's World, a brilliant exploration of the Renaissance world of the court of Henry VIII and its poet and court ambassador to the Vatican and alleged lover of Anne Boleyn Thomas Wyatt, at the time of the great upheavals of the Reformation. Faber have acquired world English rights and will publish in February 2012.

ELLEKE BOEHMER is Professor of World Literature in English, University of Oxford and is the author of three novels set in South Africa. The first, Screens Against the Sky, was shortlisted for the David Higham Award. Her new novel Nile Baby was published in 2008 by Ayebia. She has also published a book on Mandela with Oxford University Press and is working on a ‘novel from life’, The Girl is Also Well.

CAROL COOPER is a family doctor and a tutor at the Imperial College Medical School, London. She is the author of the highly successful Twins and Multiple Births (Vermilion) and Baby Milestones (Hamlyn) and consultant editor of Johnson's Mother and Baby (Dorling Kindersley). Her latest books include Your Clever Baby, published by Rylands, Peter & Small and Your Child Year by Year, published by Dorling Kindersley.www.drcarolcooper.com

JOHN DICKIE is Reader in Italian Studies at University College, London. Hodder published his Cosa Nostra: A History of the Sicilian Mafia, in January 2004 to ecstatic reviews. It won the Golden Dagger Award for Non-fiction from the Crime Writers Association in 2004 and has sold in many other languages, including in Italy and Germany, where it hit the bestseller lists on publication. Hodder then published Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and their Food, which received a Special Commendation in the 2007 Andre Simon Awards. Hodder are also publishing his major history of the Mafiosi in two volumes: Blood Brotherhoods: The Ascent of Italy’s Mafias (covering the 1860s to 1943) was published in June 2011, and Mafia Republic: Organised Crime in Contemporary Italy (1943 to the present day) will be in June 2012. 

JENNY DOWNHAM's outstanding debut novel Before I Die was published in 2007 by David Fickling Books and has sold in 26 languages. Narrated by 16-year-old Tessa, who knows she is dying from advanced leukaemia, it focuses on her to-do list before it is too late. 'I don't care how old you are. This book will not leave you' - New York Times. The film, starring Dakota Fanning, is released in 2012 as Now Is GoodYou Against Me, Jenny’s new novel, a subtle, and powerful modern love story, was published by David Fickling Books in December 2010, to rave reviews.

CATHERINE FLETCHER is a former BBC Political Unit producer and is now a Max Weber Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence. Our Man in Rome is a brilliantly vivid account of the six years of Henry VIII's divorce from Katherine of Aragon, told through the story of Henry's ambassador in Rome, Gregorio Casali. Bodley Head bought world English rights and published in early 2012. 

PETER FRANKOPAN is a Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford and a leading Byzantine scholar. His The First Crusade - The Call From the East, is by Bodley Head in February 2012 and in the US by Harvard. His new book is The New Silk Road, about the rise of the east and the fall of the west, pre-empted by Jack Macrae at Holt for North American rights and sold to Michael Fishwick at Bloomsbury for UK.

LAWRENCE FREEDMAN is Professor of War Studies at King's College London, a distinguished expert on American foreign policy, and the prize-winning author of Kennedy's Wars (OUP). His new book is A Choice of Enemies: America Confronts the Middle East which covers the complexities of America's policies and actions in the last 30 years in the most volatile area in the world. It was published in 2008 in the UK by Orion and in the US by Public Affairs, to great acclaim.

ROBERT GILDEA is Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Merton College. His Marianne in Chains: In Search of Occupied France, published in March 2002 by Macmillan in the UK and by Metropolitan in the US, won the Wolfson History Prize in 2003 and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize and for the British Academy Book Prize. His Children of the Revolution: The French 1799-1914 was published to wide review coverage in 2008 (Penguin Press in the UK and Harvard in the US). His new book, Fighters in the Shadows: The Lives of the French Resistance, draws on newly available sources to tell the story of what happened in France after the occupation in 1940, and how the story of the many strands of the Resistance has been remoulded ever since. Faber have acquired World English rights at auction; Harvard will publish in the US.

A.C. GRAYLING  Anthony Grayling is Professor of Philosophy at Birkbeck College, London, and a Fellow of St. Anne's College, Oxford. His The Meaning of Things (Weidenfeld 2001) series has sold well over 100,000 copies in the UK. His magisterial biography of Descartes was published by The Free Press in autumn 2005. Among the Dead Cities, a philosopher's look at the Allied bombing campaigns in Germany and Japan in WW2, Towards the Light, the first book to look at the hard-won achievements of human rights over the last four centuries and Thinking of Answers are published by Bloomsbury. The Good Book, Anthony’s humanist bible, was published by Bloomsbury UK and US in April 2011 to widespread coverage and entered the Sunday Times bestseller list at no 3. He is now working on The Miraculous Century, a biography of the 17th Century in Europe. www.acgrayling.com

BARBARA GRAZIOSI is Professor of Classics, Durham University. She is writing Migrant Gods: A History of Greek Civilisation for Profile in the UK and Metropolitan in the US.

GAVIN HEWITT is one of the BBC's most distinguished television journalists with a string of awards for his feature programmes, and is currently Special Correspondent for the BBC's Ten O'Clock News. His book A Soul on Ice, published by Macmillan in April 2005, is a rare glimpse behind the scenes of a reporter's public dispatches, and Gavin tells stories that are hair-raising, revelatory and sometimes downright funny, from his earliest days as a cub reporter at Radio Brighton in 1968 to riding into Baghdad with the American Third Infantry Division in 2005. He is planning a book called A Most Dangerous Dream, on the behind-the-scenes dramas of the financial crises in Europe, focusing on the personalities and how deals get done, or not.

SIR JOHN LISTER-KAYE is one of Scotland's best-known naturalists and conservationists. Time Warner publish his Song of the Rolling Earth, a wonderfully lyrical memoir, and Nature's Child, a delightful account of travels with his young daughter Hermione, who has shared his passion for the natural world since early childhood. John’s new book is At the Water’s Edge: A Personal Quest for Wildness (Canongate): it was Waterstone’s Scottish Book of the Month in February 2010. www.lister-kaye.co.uk

LAURIE MAGUIRE teaches English literature at the University of Oxford, where she is a Fellow of Magdalen College. Her Where There's a Will There's a Way, or, Everything I Needed to Know in Life I Lerned from Shakespeare, a funny, charming, lively, learned, wise book, proves her entirely plausible belief that when it comes to understanding life, all you need is Shakespeare (Nicholas Brealey Books).

KARMA NABULSI is a Prize Research Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford, and the author of Traditions of War: Occupation, Resistance, and the Law (OUP). She worked as a representative of the PLO in Beirut, Tunis, and the UN, and was a member of the Palestinian delegation to the peace talks in Washington from 1991 to 1993. She is writing a book on the founding of the Young Europe republican movement in 1834, Democracy's Conspirators, for Norton.

GEMMA O'CONNOR. Gemma is the internationally bestselling author of six murder mysteries; she has been called by the Irish Times 'a master of the thriller genre - deserves to be up there with writers like P D James and Ruth Rendell'.

ROGER PEARSON is Professor of French at Oxford University. His wonderfully lively, authoritative and entertaining biography of Voltaire, Voltaire Almighty: A Life in Thought and Action, was published by Bloomsbury to ecstatic reviews. It was Book of the Week in the Guardian and in the Week, longlisted for British Book Awards and shortlisted for the 2006 James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and the Marsh Biography Prize 2007.

JONATHAN PHILLIPS is a Senior Lecturer in history at Royal Holloway, University of London, and an expert on the Crusades. His book The Fourth Crusade was published, to great reviews, by Jonathan Cape in the UK and Viking in the US in 2004. Jonathan's new book, Holy Warriors: A Modern History of the Crusades, was published in October 2009 (Bodley Head, UK, Random House, US) and was called ‘the best recent history of the Crusades’ by New York Times. He is working on The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin.

LIZA PICARD is the author of four highly successful, best-selling and critically acclaimed books about London's history, Restoration London (1997) and Dr Johnson's London (2000), Elizabeth's London (a Sunday Times bestseller) and Victorian London, all published by Weidenfeld in the UK and St. Martin's in the US. Peter Ackroyd describes her writing as 'absorbing and revealing in equal measure'.

RACHEL POLONSKY is a superb writer and journalist who has spent many years in Moscow. Her Molotov’s Magic Lantern is a book of travel, history, and memoir that conjures a sense of Russia’s history and how its faultlines reappear in modern life.  Faber published in 2010 to rave reviews.

DIANE PURKISS is a Fellow of Keble College, Oxford and formerly Professor of English Literature at Exeter University. Her acclaimed The English Civil War: A People's History, was published by HarperCollins as a major lead title in 2006. She is now working on a history of English food.

JULIAN RICHARDS The popular presenter of Meet the Ancestors and Blood of the Vikings on BBC television, and of Mapping the Town on Radio 4, Julian has published several books on Stonehenge with English Heritage. www.archaemedia.net

MEG ROSOFF's stunning debut novel, How I Live Now, won the Guardian Children's Award soon after it was published in 2004, and has also won the Michael Printz Award and the Boston Readers Club Prize in the US. It has been shortlisted for several other prizes, including the Whitbread and the British Book Awards, and the LA Times Book Award, and has been hailed as 'the best children's novel for adults since 'The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time' by Time Out. It has sold in many other languages and is to be made into a film directed by Kevin MacDonald.  Just In Case, her second novel, garnered superlative reviews and won the Carnegie medal. What I Was (Puffin UK and Viking US) appeared in 2008 and The Bride's Farewell in 2009. Her new novel, There Is No Dog, is touching and hilarious and was published in August 2011 and hailed in the Guardian as ‘another masterpiece’. www.megrosoff.co.uk

MIRI RUBIN is Professor of Late Medieval European History at Queen Mary College, University of London, and a frequent contributor to discussion programmes on BBC radio and television. She is the author of two critically acclaimed books, Corpus Christi (Cambridge) and Gentile Tales (Yale). Penguin Press published The Hollow Crown: A History of Britain in the Late Middle Ages, to fantastic review coverage. Her new book is Mary, Mother of God, published by Yale University Press in the USA and Penguin Press in the UK.

LAUREN ST JOHN is a journalist and the author of a number of acclaimed sports and music biographies. Her deeply evocative memoir of growing up on a farm during the civil war in Zimbabwe in the 1970s and 80s, Rainbow's End, is published by Hamish Hamilton in the UK and Scribner in the US; 'astonishingly evocative and wonderfully well-written' Justin Cartwright. www.laurenstjohn.com

PAUL SEABRIGHT is a brilliant, prizewinning economist at the University of Toulouse. His acclaimed The Company of Strangers: A Natural History of Economic Life, published by Princeton University Press in 2004, looks at why humans have developed from wary, aggressive bandits to trusting strangers, and how the wheels of global transactions turn on this precarious fact; it was hailed as 'brilliant' by Martin Wolf, Financial Times. Paul is publishing The Wars of the Sexes with Princeton in March 2012. http://paulseabright.com

JULIE SUMMERS Julie's biography of her grandfather, The Colonel: Philip Toosey and the Bridge on the River Kwai, published by Simon and Schuster, tells the true story, based on private papers, of the prisoner-of-war camp that was responsible for constructing the infamous bridge and railway between 1941 and1945. Simon and Schuster published Stranger in the House, her book about how women were affected by the return of their men at the end of World War II, to great reviews in 2008 and will publish the follow-up, on Evacuees. She is now working on Jambusters, a history of the Women's Insitute, also for Simon and Schuster. www.juliesummers.co.uk

KATHLEEN TAYLOR is affiliated to the department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics at Oxford University, and the author of Brainwashing: the Science of Thought Control, OUP 2004, shortlisted for the MIND Book of the Year Award. Cruelty, her new book, is published by OUP. www.taylorsciencewriter.com

MARK VERNON is the acclaimed author of The Philosophy of Friendship (Palgrave). His new book is the philosophical and useful What Not to Say, which is published by Weidenfeld.

ANNA WHITELOCK is a brilliant young Cambridge historian, whose major new book is Mary Tudor: England's First Queen, a lively biography of England's first Queen Regnant, the much maligned and oft-overlooked Mary, reconsidering Mary's place in history, her reputation and legacy to her half-sister Elizabeth. It is published by Bloomsbury in the UK and Random House in the US. The Queen's Bedfellows: In Favour, Love and Exile has been acquired by Bloomsbury, for publication in 2012. Anna co-presented the BBC1 series, To The Manor Reborn, in autumn 2011. www.annawhitelock.co.uk

TIM WHITMARSH is Tutor in Greek at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and his brilliant and original book, Battling the Gods: the Struggle Against Religion in Ancient Greece and Rome, about the individuals who pitted themselves ­ brilliantly, heroically, or foolishly ­ against the powers of organized religion, has just sold on proposal to Faber in the UK, to Knopf in the US at auction, and to Ambo Anthos in the Netherlands.