Garth Nix
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| Garth Nix | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1963 Melbourne, Australia |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Genres | Fantasy |
| Website | Personal Site, Publisher's Site |
Garth Nix (born in Melbourne in 1963) is an Australian author of young adult fantasy novels, most notably the Old Kingdom series, The Seventh Tower series, and The Keys to the Kingdom series. Garth Nix is not a pseudonym. He has frequently been asked this question and said, "I guess people ask me because it sounds like the perfect name for a writer of fantasy. However, it is my real name." [1]
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Nix was born in Melbourne, Australia, and spent his childhood in Canberra. He attended the University of Canberra from 1984-1986. Emerging in 1986 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in professional writing, Nix soon became heavily involved in the publishing industry after moving to Sydney, working his way up the corporate ladder until finally becoming a senior editor in 1991 with HarperCollins Australia. He left to travel overseas in 1993, returning to work in 1994 with an IT public relations and marketing firm which in 1996 led to him co-founding PR firm Gotley Nix Evans Pty Ltd. In 1999 he joined Curtis Brown, an Australian literary agency, as a part-time agent after a stint as a full-time writer in 1998. However, in 2002, Nix once more became a full-time writer. He has worked as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve, and as a bookseller, book sales representative, publicist, editor, marketing consultant and literary agent. His books are published around the world and have been translated into 36 languages. Nix's books have appeared on the bestseller lists of The New York Times, Publishers Weekly, The Bookseller, The Australian and The Sunday Times. Garth Nix has recently signed a reported seven-figure deal for three new titles, two being additions to the Old Kingdom series, a prequel and a sequel, the first of which has the working title Clariel: The Lost Abhorsen. These titles will appear in 2010 and 2011 [1].
He currently lives near Coogee Beach, Sydney, with his wife, Anna, and his sons, Thomas and Edward Nix.
- 1999 - awarded a Special Award in the Golden Duck Awards for Australian Contribution to Children's Science Fiction
Also known as the Abhorsen Trilogy (only in the USA)
- 2005 The Creature in the Case (especially produced for World Book Day) - Now also released as part of the collection below.
- 2005 (UK 2006) Across the Wall: A Tale of the Abhorsen and Other Stories
- 2000 The Fall
- 2000 Castle
- 2001 Aenir
- 2001 Above the Veil
- 2001 Into Battle
- 2001 The Violet Keystone
- 2003 Mister Monday
- 2004 Grim Tuesday
- 2005 Drowned Wednesday
- 2006 Sir Thursday
- 2007 Lady Friday
- 2008 Superior Saturday
- 2009 Lord Sunday
These books were essentially self-published (though later republished by Text Media in Melbourne) and although aimed at "Very Clever Babies Aged 3-6 Months", some help is needed from parents with the long words such as "ichthyologist" used by the character Freddy the Fish.
- 1988 Very Clever Baby's First Reader
- ???? Very Clever Baby's Ben*Hur
- ???? Very Clever Baby's First Christmas
- ???? Very Clever Baby's Guide to the Greenhouse Effect
- 1990 The Ragwitch
- 1997 Shade's Children
- 2000 Serena and the Sea Serpent (in Aussie Bites series)
- 2007 One Beastly Beast: Two Aliens, Three Inventors, Four Fantastic Tales — a book of short stories for younger readers, including Serena and the Sea Serpent
- 2009 A Confusion of Princes — a forthcoming young adult space opera novel [2]
- ^ Nix, Garth (2007). Across the Wall. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-722146-2.