Philip Palmer is a British novelist and screenwriter.[ The Author | Philip Palmer’s Debatable Spaces] Originally from Port Talbot, Wales, he studied English at Jesus College, Oxford, matriculation in 1978.
Writing career
His first novel was
Debatable Space, published in January 2008 by Orbit Books in the United Kingdom and the United States. Philip Palmer describes himself as "...a glamorous hyphenate. Writer-writer-toolazytogetaproperjob-writer."
Works
Radio Plays
For BBC Radio 4:
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Gin and Rum, about ghosts, 30 June 2000
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Fallen, 23 January 2001
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The Faerie Queene, a very free version of Edmund Spenser’s epic poem, in the outlet's Classic Serial, 30 September 2001 – 7 October 2001
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The King’s Coiner, about the older-age anti-counterfeiter Isaac Newton, amid the cut-throat nature of serious fraud at the time, 23 April 2002
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The Travels of Marco Polo, 18 February 2004
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Rubato, about music, 11 February 2005
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Blame, about industrial manslaughter, 12 August 2005
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Breaking Point, Day of the Dead, 10 August 2007
[
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BBC – Friday Play – Breaking Point
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The Art Of Deception, 22–26 June 2009
[ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Art of Deception]
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The Art of Deception, Day of the Dead (series 2), 20–24 December 2010
[ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – Day of the Dead]
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Bearing Witness, legal drama inside the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague, 12 December 2012
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Speak, amid dystopian "Globish", a 1500-word version of English, a dangerous romance makes a case for how words – and even more, their paucity – can control, confine, leach emotion and trap minds, 18 June 2018
Novels
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Debatable Space (2008)
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Red Claw (2009)
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Version 43 (2010)
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Hell Ship (2011)
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Artemis (2011)
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Hell on Earth (2017)
External links