English journalist and novelist
Mike Gayle (born October 1970) is an English journalist and novelist.[ 1]
Biography
Gayle was born in Quinton, Birmingham , to parents from Jamaica , and is the younger brother of broadcaster Phil Gayle . He attended Lordswood Boys' School where he was Head Boy.[ 2] He studied Sociology and Journalism at university.[ 3]
Gayle edited a music fanzine and joined a Birmingham listings magazine before moving to London and beginning a postgraduate diploma in journalism. Before having his first novel published, he was a features editor and later an agony aunt for Just Seventeen and Bliss . As a freelance journalist he has written for the Sunday Times , The Guardian , The Times , the Daily Express , FHM , More! , The Scotsman and Top of the Pops .[ 1]
Gayle is a chick-lit author, although he has expressed a dislike for the term.[ 4] Alongside Tony Parsons and Tim Lott , he has also been associated with a "new wave of fictions about inadequate young British masculinities".[ 5]
Gayle is friends with Danny Wallace , who has dubbed Mike his Minister of Home Affairs in the Kingdom of Lovely . He lives in Harborne with his daughters and his wife Claire.[ 2]
Novels
My Legendary Girlfriend . London: Flame, 1998. ISBN 0-340-71816-1
Mr. Commitment . London: Flame, 1999. ISBN 0-340-71825-0
Turning Thirty . London: Flame, 2000. ISBN 0-340-76794-4
Dinner for Two . London: Flame, 2002. ISBN 0-340-82342-9
His 'n' Hers , 2004. ISBN 0-340-82537-5
Brand New Friend , 2005. ISBN 0-340-82539-1
Wish You Were Here , 2007. ISBN 0-340-82542-1
The Life & Soul of the Party , 2008. ISBN 0-340-82544-8
The To Do List , 2009. ISBN 0-340-93675-4
The Importance of Being a Bachelor , 2010. ISBN 0-340-91851-9
The Stag and Hen Weekend , 2012. ISBN 1444742825
Turning Forty , 2013. ISBN 978-0-340-91853-1
Seeing Other People , 2014. ISBN 978-1-4447-0863-9
The Hope Family Calendar , 2016. ISBN 978-1-4736-0895-5
The Man I Think I Know , 2018. ISBN 978-1-473-60899-3
Half a world away , 2019. ISBN 978-1-473-68733-2
All The Lonely People , 2020.[ 6]
References
^ a b Sunmonu, Yinka (2002). "Gayle, Mike". In Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture . Routledge. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-134-70024-0 .
^ a b Brady, Poppy (21 June 2007), "City author's hoping for a summer hit" , Birmingham Mail , Birmingham: Trinity Mirror Midlands, archived from the original on 12 December 2019, retrieved 29 September 2012
^ Gayle, Mike, United we stand , The Guardian , 20 July 2004. Accessed 11 July 2020.
^ Gayle, Mike, I'm a chicky chappy , The Guardian , 20 June 2008. Accessed 11 July 2020.
^ Baldick, Chris (2008). The Oxford dictionary of literary terms . Oxford University Press US. pp. 181–. ISBN 978-0-19-920827-2 . Other authors associated with this new wave of fictions about inadequate young British masculinities include Tony Parsons (Man and Boy , 1991), Tim Lott, and Mike Gayle.
^ "Mike Gayle Author" .
External links
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