International Bestselling Book Author Richard Mason

Published: Jan. 19, 2021, 8 a.m.

Richard Mason first came to prominence at the age of 21, when the London Times dubbed him "king of the hot young writers". He had just published his first novel, The Drowning People, an \u201cexceptional achievement\u201d (Guardian) that became "one of the most talked about first novels of 1999" (Daily Telegraph). As The Telegraph put it, "If you want to be au courant with modern fiction, you will need to read it."

"The Drowning People" sold more than a million copies in over 20 countries, was translated into 22 languages and won Italy's Grinzane Cavour Prize for Best First Novel.

Mason\u2019s second novel, Us (2005), was \u201can explosive mixture of cocky irony and elegy \u201cand took five years to write. It fuses the narratives of two men and a woman, each remembering their time at Oxford and the parts they played in the death of a dear friend. The critics\u2019 response was ecstatic. As Rebecca Pearson put it in the Independent on Sunday: \u201cOnly two books in my life have made me cry\u2026 [One of them] is Us, Richard Mason's devastatingly tragic, funny and utterly gripping novel."

In The Lighted Rooms (2008), Mason takes the audacious step of putting an eighty-year-old woman in the grip of dementia at the center of the drama. What no one knows is that Joan McAllister is having the time of her life, as dementia\u2019s hallucinations allow her to revisit her past and the vitality of her youth. Ranging from British nursing homes to South African concentration camps during the Anglo-Boer War, and taking in the stock market bubble and the tensions of a relationship between a mother and her daughter, the characters in this \u201cimmensely readable magnum opus\u201d (The New Yorker) are drawn with \u201ca narrative wisdom surely unknown to most authors in their thirties\u201d \u2013 Il Sottoscrito (Italy). As a leading Dutch newspaper put it: \u201cRichard Mason is a hugely talented writer. When you read his book, you automatically think of authors like Thomas Mann and John Updike. This is a classic novel, written by a future literary master.\u201d (Rob Schouten, Trouw)

Psychological accuracy is a hallmark of Mason's fiction, and his fourth novel, History of a Pleasure Seeker (2011), is a treasure trove of insight and humour. An Oprah Pick of the Month, the story of a dashing young man\u2019s adventures through the gilded age is \u201cis the best new work of fiction to cross my desk in many moons.\u201d (Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post)In his \u201cbeautifully turned, classical style\u201d ('New York Times Book Review) Mason takes the lid off a privileged family and shows how sex, while not necessarily the same thing as love, can be a potent force for good.

Philanthropy:
With the royalties of "The Drowning People", Mason established the Kay Mason Foundation (www.kmf.org.za). Under the patronage of Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the foundation works to identify promising teenagers and give them the education and experience they need to lead South Africa in the post-Apartheid era.

In 2010, Mason became a co-founder of Project Lulutho, in collaboration with the community of Mthwaku in South Africa\u2019s rural Eastern Cape. Mason spent a year under canvas helping with the construction and was a major funder of this center of conservation and green business skills, playing a key role in bringing together the stakeholders from civil society and government necessary to turn a ravaged ecosystem into \u201ca place of hope.\u201d (www.lulutho.org)

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