Mark Winkler (born 29 January 1966) is a South African writer of literary fiction living in Cape Town. He is the author of two novels, An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Absolutely Everything (2013) and Wasted (2015). His third novel, The Safest Place You Know, is due to be published in September 2016.
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Mark Winkler | |
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Born | (1966-01-29) 29 January 1966 (age 56) Johannesburg, South Africa |
Occupation | Writer |
Genre | Fiction |
Notable works | An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Absolutely Everything and Wasted |
Website | |
themarkwinkler |
Winkler was born in Johannesburg in 1966. He grew up in what is now Mpumalanga and attended high school at St. Alban's College, Pretoria. He graduated from Rhodes University, Grahamstown, with a Bachelor of Journalism in 1990.
His first novel, An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Absolutely Everything, has been described as “an intensely absorbing and unapologetically apolitical tale”,[1] and “remarkable in its refusal to conform to ideas of what a South African novel should be”.[2]
His second novel, the Wasted, was longlisted for the 2016 Sunday Times Barry Ronge Fiction Prize.[3] Wasted has been described as “tense, darkly humorous, unpredictable and thought-provoking”,[4] “one of the year’s most ambitious, suspenseful, tightly controlled and expertly executed novels”.[5]
Winkler’s short story, When I Came Home, was shortlisted for the 2016 Commonwealth Writer’s Prize, one of 26 stories to be selected out of almost 4,000 submissions from 47 countries.[6]
His short story, Ink,[7] was awarded third prize in the 2016 Short Story Day Africa competition[8] and was published in the anthology Water.[7]
Winkler is a member of PEN South Africa.
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