Keir Graff

Keir Graff

Keir Graff
Born 1969
Missoula, Montana
Pen name Michael McCulloch
Occupation Novelist, Literary editor
Nationality United States
Genre suspense fiction, children's literature
Spouse Marya Graff
Children Two sons, Felix and Cosmo
Website
www.keirgraff.com

Keir Graff (born 1969)[1] is an American novelist and literary editor.

Biography

Graff was born and raised in Missoula, Montana. He has had four novels published and is also the editor of Booklist Online, a publication of the American Library Association that consists chiefly of book reviews. He currently resides in Chicago.[2]

Career

Graff moved to Chicago, Illinois in 1996. After quitting his job in 1997 to go on "wife support," he wrote and tried to sell screenplays before finding more success as a freelance writer. In 2001 he accepted a position as editorial assistant at Booklist. In 2005 Graff was named senior editor of the newly created Booklist Online.[3] His first novel, Cold Lessons, was published under the pseudonym Michael McCulloch in 2007.[4] Other books soon followed under his real name: My Fellow Americans (2007), One Nation Under God (2008), and The Price of Liberty (2010). Graff's first children's book, The Other Felix, will be published in fall 2011.[5] He also is under contract to write a second children's book.[6]

Reviews

Critical response to Graff's novels has been mixed at times but appears to be improving. Reviewing My Fellow Americans, Library Journal wrote that "Graff . . . has a light but sure hand. Jason's harrowing adventures, perfectly paced and leavened by touches of humor, are gripping from start to finish." [7] Publishers Weekly disagreed: "While many thoughtful observers have wondered whether the war on terror will cost the U.S. its soul, Graff barely scratches the surface of the challenging ideas his intriguing conceit presents." [8] Publishers Weekly was also critical of One Nation, Under God, calling it "unconvincing fictional effort to paint the extreme religious right as a major threat." [9] The Chicago Sun-Times, however, noted that " . . . One Nation evokes such paranoid 1970s thrillers as The Parallax View and Six Days of the Condor." [10]

Reviews of The Price of Liberty were positive, with Library Journal calling it "another winner" [11] and Publishers Weekly concluding "Graff's cynical take on government waste and corporate greed plays well.".[12] Other review sources offered praise, including ForeWord ("Graff's writing keeps the reader anxious for the next scene."),[13] the Chicago Sun-Times ("Other contemporary thriller writers resort to the exotic and outlandish to sustain their narrative, but Graff builds suspense around real people in the real world."),[14] Blogcritics.org ("a first-class thriller that sweeps the reader along on a bouncy, jarring ride",[15] and more.

Awards

Graff was named a finalist for the Society of Midland Authors Fiction Prize in 2011, for his book The Price of Liberty.[16]

Works

Novels

Children's Books

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.