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American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Katherine Neville (born 1945) is a New York Times, USA Today and #1 internationally bestselling American author who writes adventure/quest novels. Her novels include The Eight (1988), A Calculated Risk (1992), The Magic Circle (1998)[1] and The Fire (2008), which is a sequel to The Eight.[2]
Katherine Neville | |
---|---|
Born | 1945 (age 78–79) Missouri, U.S. |
Occupation | Author |
Period | 1988–present |
Genre | Quest / Adventure fiction |
Notable works | The Eight, The Fire, The Magic Circle, A Calculated Risk |
Spouse | Dr. Karl Pribram |
Website | |
www |
Katherine Neville was born in the midwest and attended university in Colorado, later doing postgraduate studies in African literature. She then moved to New York City and began a career in the computer field working for IBM in transportation and energy.[2]
In the 1970s Neville was an international data processing consultant to the Algerian government, and in the late 1970s she went to work at the Department of Energy's nuclear research site in Idaho. Between jobs and during school, she supported herself as a painter and a model. This experience led her to develop her own photography skills and eventually start a photography business in Colorado, which she ran for several years.[2]
In 1980, she moved to San Francisco and became a vice president at Bank of America.[2] After publication of her first book (The Eight), she moved to Europe, living in Vienna, Austria, and northern Germany, with her spouse, the late neuroscientist Dr. Karl Pribram. In the 1990s Neville and Pribram moved to Virginia and Washington, DC.[2] Her restoration of renowned potter Teruo Hara's home and studio was featured in The Washington Post.[3]
Neville's novels have been compared with the works of Alexandre Dumas, Umberto Eco, Charles Dickens, and Steven Spielberg.[2] Her books have been translated into forty languages and are in print in over 80 countries. Neville’s books have appeared on bestseller lists and received multiple awards and honors around the world.[4]
Year | Novel | Ebook | Audio | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | The Eight | Random House / Ballantine
(Trade ISBN 9780345419088 & Mass Market 9780345366238) |
Open Road | Random House Audio |
1992 | A Calculated Risk | Random House / Ballantine
(Mass Market 9780345386823) |
Open Road | |
1998 | The Magic Circle | Random House / Ballantine
(Mass Market 9780345423139) |
Open Road | Random House Audio / BDD
(abridged) |
2008 | The Fire | Random House / Ballantine
(Trade Paperback 9780345500687) |
Open Road | Random House Audio |
Source:[5]
Source:[5]
The Eight garnered international acclaim upon its release and continues to be ranked as a top thriller novel. Publishers Weekly said, “Even readers with no interest in chess will be swept up into this astonishing fantasy-adventure… Neville has great fun rewriting history and making it all ring true. With two believable heroines, nonstop suspense, espionage, murder, and a puzzle that seems the key to the whole Western mystical tradition, this spellbinder soars above the level of first-rate escapist entertainment.” The Washington Post called The Eight "A feminist answer to Raiders of the Lost Ark." The Boston Herald lauded the novel as “The female counterpart to Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose… Impossible to put down.”[6]
A Calculated Risk was selected as a New York Times Notable Book for 1992.[7] Newgate Callendar of the New York Times Book Review said, “Never a dull moment, and Ms Neville makes it all the more plausible because of her intimate knowledge of how international banking works. She plots well and takes the reader through the intrigues and backbiting of immense corporations…[A Calculated Risk] churns up wave after wave of excitement."[8]
Booklist called The Magic Circle "compelling" and noted that "fans of that emerging subgenre —– the millennial thriller —- will want to add this one to their reading list.”[9] Beth Dora Reisberg of January Magazine termed The Magic Circle a "tour de force."[10]
The Fire, Neville's sequel to The Eight, topped bestseller lists internationally and quickly became a New York Times Bestseller. In a 2008 review in The Independent of London, Barry Forshaw declared that The Fire was much better than The Da Vinci Code.[11] The Chicago Sun-Times stated, "Katherine Neville’s follow up to The Eight, a cult classic that impressed many readers as a more intelligent and literary precursor to Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code. . . The Fire impresses as much for its literary aspects as it does for its action, puzzles and suspense . . . This is a book to be savored as it’s read, and admired for the beauty of its accomplishment.”[12]
Neville’s books have been bestsellers in many countries, and appeared on many bestseller lists in the United States, including USA Today, New York Times, Publishers Weekly, Wall Street Journal, Indie List, Seattle Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, St Paul Pioneer Press, and Denver Post.[13]
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