
peoplepill id: mark-mills
The basics
Quick Facts
Intro
British writer
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Geneva, Switzerland
Star sign
Age
61 years
Education
Lancing College
Awards
CWA New Blood Dagger
(2004)
Genre(s):
The details (from wikipedia)
Biography
Mark Mills is a British writer of screenplays and novels. His first screenplay was the BAFTA-nominated short film One Night Stand starring Jemma Redgrave and James Purefoy in 1993; this won Mills a Best Screenplay' award at the Angers European First Film Festival in 1995.
Mills's first novel was Amagansett, later reissued under the title The Whaleboat House published in 2004; this won him the award for Best Crime Novel by a Debut Author at the Crime Writers' Association Award. His second novel, The Savage Garden, was published in 2006. His third novel, The Information Officer, was published in April, 2009.
Work
Year | Work | Format | Award |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | One Night Stand | Short film | Angers European First Film Festival – Best Screenplay (Won) |
1999 | The Lost Son | Film | |
2002 | Global Heresy | Film | |
2004 | The Reckoning | Film | |
Amagansett (reissued as The Whaleboat House) | Novel | Crime Writers' Association Award – Best Crime Novel by a Debut Author (Won) | |
2006 | The Savage Garden | Novel | |
2009 | The Information Officer | Novel | |
2011 | House of the Hanged | Novel | |
2012 | The Long Shadow | Novel | |
2014 | Waiting For Doggo | Novel | |
2016 | Where Dead Men Meet | Novel |
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article.
The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Mark Mills is in following lists
By field of work
Notable English people in film/TV/radio and stage
Gender:Male, Born in:Years 1930 to 1969
Notable British people in film/TV/radio and stage
Gender:Male, Born in:Years 1930 to 1969
Notable English people in literature
Gender:Male, Born in:Years 1930 to 1969
Notable British people in literature
Gender:Male, Born in:Years 1930 to 1969
By work and/or country
comments so far.
Comments
Credits
References and sources
Mark Mills