Mark Chadbourn

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Mark Chadbourn

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Born
in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, The United Kingdom
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April 2008

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A two-time winner of the prestigious British Fantasy Award, Mark has published his epic, imaginative novels in many countries around the world. He grew up in the mining community of the English Midlands, and was the first person in his family to go to university. After studying Economic History at Leeds, he became a successful journalist, writing for several of the UK's renowned national newspapers as well as contributing to magazines and TV.

When his first short story won Fear magazine's Best New Author award, he was snapped up by an agent and subsequently published his first novel, Underground, a supernatural thriller set in the coalfields of his youth. Quitting journalism to become a full-time author, he has written stories which have tra
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Mark Chadbourn The sources from this era are few and far between, and many of those are questionable. My process when coming to the Attacotti, then, was to look at t…moreThe sources from this era are few and far between, and many of those are questionable. My process when coming to the Attacotti, then, was to look at the space between the information we have and ask a series of questions: why do we know so little about the Attacotti when we have evidence for the other barbarian tribes in the conspiracy, why is there little evidence for their homeland when we know where all the others originated, why were they considered cannibals, a behaviour for which there was no longer a tradition among the western tribes and which, indeed, was considered a monstrous, outsider practice etc? Considering the answers required me to look for parallels elsewhere. We know for instance that there was ritual cannibalism among the inhabitants of Western Europe during the megalith building time and earlier. We believe that many of the (what we now call) Celtic tribes migrated from the Indus Valley. So I considered the possibility of a migratory tribe that kept itself and its practices isolated to explain that lack of records and the surrounding mystery. Looking at the possible cannibalistic rituals of prehistory and then the funerary rites of the Aghori seemed to fill in some of the gaps. Which is a long-winded way of saying that I tried to follow a logical thought process in the absence of any solid sources! There's more in the final book in the sequence, The Bear King.(less)
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More books by Mark Chadbourn…

The Witch Farm TV Series

A four-part adaptation of my book Testimony is going to land on BBC One this Halloween.

Called The Witch Farm after the hit podcast adaptation, it will star This is England’s Michael Socha and In My Skin’s Gabrielle Creevy.

It’s the true story of Bill and Liz Rich who move into an isolated house in the Brecon Beacons and are instantly pitched into a supernatural nightmare.

I have a consulting pro

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The Book of Engli...
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Mark’s Recent Updates

Mark Chadbourn wrote a new blog post

The Witch Farm TV Series



A four-part adaptation of my book Testimony is going to land on BBC One this Halloween.Called The Witch Farm after the hit podcast adaptation, it wil Read more of this blog post »
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Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke
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Some interesting ideas.
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We Begin at the End by Chris  Whitaker
We Begin at the End
by Chris Whitaker (Goodreads Author)
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A lyrical, heartfelt crime novel with a standout character in the outlaw, Duchess Day Radley.
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One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez
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Epic magical realism.
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Colonel Sun by Kingsley Amis
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Pedestrian. Lacks the imagination, character or colour of the Fleming novels.
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The Cracked Mirror by Chris Brookmyre
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Interesting concept.
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Outlive by Peter Attia
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Starts slow ends strong.
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The Secret History by Donna Tartt
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Remarkable. A deserved classic.
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The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami
The Dream Hotel
by Laila Lalami (Goodreads Author)
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Prescient.
More of Mark's books…
Quotes by Mark Chadbourn  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Tell me about love when you've been with someone for years, cared for them when they're ill, put up with them when they're miserable or grumpy, taken the sharp side of their tongue and still come back. Tell me about love when you've acted quite appallingly, and the other person has still accepted you.”
Mark Chadbourn, The Queen of Sinister

“Whenever something strange happens, the Baptists and Methodists always say there must have been witches involved. What they are really talking about are Satanists. Satanists are not witches. Satanists are Christians because Satan is a Christian concept. This kind of confusion has been going on for centuries. Witches weren’t evil. They had an extremely high moral structure. To an actual practicing witch, life was precious because it was a religion linked to nature and the cycles of nature. When a witch saw a child, they didn’t want to sacrifice it – in the child they saw the promise of continuance which they saw in nature. Witchcraft is derivative of the Anglo-Saxon term wiccae, which means wisdom. It referred”
Mark Chadbourn, Testimony

“Sex is the glue of relationships, Caitlin, and it's what life is all about. It's the opposite of death, of giving up, of getting swamped by... What's out there. See it as symbolic.”
Mark Chadbourn, The Queen of Sinister

Polls

AUGUST FANTASY: This poll decides which 2 books move on to the run-off poll for our Fantasy Book of the Month!

 
  10 votes 35.7%

 
  7 votes 25.0%

 
  4 votes 14.3%

 
  4 votes 14.3%

 
  2 votes 7.1%

 
  1 vote 3.6%

28 total votes
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Topics Mentioning This Author

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Beyond Reality: Forthcoming books for May 25 105 May 18, 2009 12:25PM  
Beyond Reality: This topic has been closed to new comments. Nominations for August 20 95 May 20, 2009 09:17AM  
Beyond Reality: This topic has been closed to new comments. What else are you reading in December 2009? 82 113 Dec 30, 2009 12:42PM  
Beyond Reality: This topic has been closed to new comments. What else are you reading in January 2010? 75 124 Jan 31, 2010 05:51PM  
Beyond Reality: This topic has been closed to new comments. What are you reading in May 2010? 60 97 May 31, 2010 04:28PM  
“After nourishment, shelter and companionship, stories are the thing we need most in the world.”
Philip Pullman

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