Victoria Hislop

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Victoria Hislop
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Signing books in Greece, February 2008
Born 1959 (age 64–65)
Bromley, Kent, England
Occupation Novelist
Nationality British
Alma mater St Hilda's College, Oxford
Spouse Ian Hislop (m. 1988)
Children 2
Website
www.victoriahislop.com

Victoria Hislop (née Hamson; born 1959) is an English author.[1]

Personal

Born in Bromley, Kent (now part of London), she was raised in Tonbridge, Kent, and attended Tonbridge Grammar School.[2] She studied English at St Hilda's College, Oxford[3] and worked in publishing and as a journalist before becoming an author.[citation needed] She lived in London for over 20 years, and now lives in Sissinghurst.[2]

She married Private Eye editor Ian Hislop on 16 April 1988 in Oxford. They have two children, Emily Helen (born 1990) and William David (born 1993).[4]

Career

Her novel The Island (2005), which the Sunday Express hailed as "the new Captain Corelli's Mandolin",[this quote needs a citation] was a number one bestseller in Britain, its success in part the result of having been selected by the Richard & Judy Book Club for their 2006 Summer Reads. To Nisi (The Island) was filmed as a TV series by the Greek TV channel MEGA.

In 2009, she donated the short story Aflame in Athens to Oxfam's "Ox-Tales" project, four collections of British stories written by 38 authors. Her story was published in the "Fire" collection.[5] Hislop has a particular affection for Greece, visits the country often for research and other reasons, and has a second home on Crete.[6]

Works

Novels

  • The Island (2005)
  • The Return (2008)
  • The Thread (2011)
  • The Sunrise (2014)

Short stories

  • One Cretan Evening (2011)
    • 'One Cretan Evening' (2008)
    • 'The Pine Tree' (2008)
    • 'By The Fire' (2009)
    • 'The Warmest Christmas Ever' (2007)
    • 'Aflame in Athens' (2009)
  • The Last Dance (2013)

Non fiction

  • Sink or Swim: The Self-help Book for Men Who Never Read Them (2002) (with Duncan Goodhew)

References

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  4. Marriages and Births England and Wales 1984-2006
  5. Oxfam: Ox-Tales
  6. Victoria Hislop "The tragedy of my beloved Greece", Sunday Telegraph, 20 May 2012

External links