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Alex Shearer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alex Shearer
Born (1949-06-25) 25 June 1949 (age 75)
Scotland
OccupationWriter
NationalityScottish
CitizenshipUK
GenreChildren's picture books Scripts

Alex Shearer (born 25 June 1949) is a British novelist and scriptwriter. He was born in Wick, in the north of Scotland. Alex Shearer sold his first TV script at the age of 29, after a varied career of some 30 odd jobs.

He wrote for television, film, theatre and radio (including plays and short stories for BBC Radio 4)[1] for 14 years, and then devoted himself to becoming a novelist.

His 2003 novel The Speed of the Dark was shortlisted for the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize.[2] The Greatest Store in the World was adapted into a television film by the BBC. His novel Bootleg was adapted for a television series by the BBC, and later adapted into manga and anime under its Japanese title Chocolate Underground.[3]

TV work

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Radio work

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  • Flying The Flag 1985-1990, a series featuring Dinsdale Landen, 28 episodes. Radio 4.
  • The Dream Maker 1992 - radio version of stage play. Also remade in Germany.
  • The Diabolical Gourmet 2005 – Radio 4 Afternoon play
  • Play Chopsticks For Me – Radio 4 Short story
  • Getting A Life Radio 4 short story
  • Bonding Radio 4 short story

Film work

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  • The Greatest Store In The World 1999 (Bafta nomination)
  • Play Chopsticks For Me 2000 – Short film
  • Chocolate Underground 2008/9 Full length animated film version of novel BOOTLEG made by Japanese company MUSE. First full length animation to be streamed episodically to mobile phones and internet in 2008, followed by theatrical release. Premiered in Tokyo, January 2009.

Stage work

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  • The Morning After - Bath Theatre
  • One More Time - Chichester and tour of the South West.
  • Out of the Blue - Chichester and Edinburgh.
  • Standing Room Only Chichester.
  • The Dream Maker - The Orchard Theatre Company, Barnstaple, tour of the South West
  • A Time And A Season - Theatre Royal, Plymouth
  • Harry In The Moonlight – Northcott Theatre, Exeter

Novels

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  • The Dream Maker (1992)
  • Professor Sniff and the Lost Spring Breezes (1996), Gollancz
  • Wilmot and Chips (1996), Red Fox
  • The Winter Brothers and the Missing Snow (1997), Puffin
  • Dr. Twilite and the Autumn Snooze (1997), Puffin
  • The Summer Sisters and the Dance Disaster (1997), Puffin
  • Box 132 (1997), Harper Collins
  • The Found (2005), Macmillan
  • Wilmot and Pops (1998), Hodder
  • The Greatest Store in the World (1999), Hodder
  • The Great Blue Yonder (2002), Macmillan
  • The Stolen (2002), Macmillan
  • Sea Legs (2003), Hodder
  • Bootleg (2003), Macmillan
  • The Crush (2003)
  • The Speed of the Dark (2004), Macmillan
  • The Lost (2004), Macmillan
  • The Fugitives (2004),Haddock
  • The Great Switcheroonie (2006), Hodder
  • The Hunted (2005), Macmillan
  • I Was a Schoolboy Bridegroom (2006),Hodder
  • Land Lubbers (2007), Hodder
  • The Invisible Man's Socks (2007), Macmillan
  • Tins (2007, released in the United States as Canned)
  • The Cloud Hunters (2012), Hot Key
  • Sky Run 2013 (Hot Key Books)
  • This Is The Life 2014 (HarperCollins - Blue Door) ADULT
  • The Ministry of Ghosts 2014 (Hot Key Books)
  • A Message To The Sea 2016 (Piccadilly Press)
  • A Message To The Sea – published France, Germany and Japan

References

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  1. ^ Gaisford, Sue (1997) "Radio: From Elizabeth I to Elton John ... it's the same story", The Independent, 14 September 1997, retrieved 2011-05-07
  2. ^ "Teen's tale wins children's prize", BBC, 6 October 2003, retrieved 2011-05-07
  3. ^ "News: Alex Shearer's Bootleg Novel Made into Manga, Anime", Anime News Network, retrieved 2011-05-07
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