Nicholas Royle


Nicholas Royle is an English novelist, editor, publisher, literary reviewer and creative writing lecturer.

Literary career

Author

Royle has written seven novels: Counterparts, Saxophone Dreams, The Matter of the Heart, The Director’s Cut, Antwerp, Regicide and First Novel. He also claims to have written more than 100 short stories, which have appeared in a variety of anthologies and magazines, including Bad Idea, with his short story Confessions of a Serial Coat Snatcher appearing in the 2008 Bad Idea Anthology. He has written two short-story collections: Mortality and Ornithology.

Awards

Royle has won a British Fantasy Award three times: Best Anthology in 1992 and 1993 and Best Short Story in 1993. He has been nominated for Best Short Story three further times.
The Matter of the Heart won the Bad Sex in Fiction Award in 1997.

Editor

As an editor, Royle is best known for having edited The Lighthouse, by Alison Moore, which was shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize, and The Many by Wyl Menmuir, which was longlisted for the 2016 Man Booker Prize.
He has also edited 12 anthologies including A Book of Two Halves, The Tiger Garden: A Book of Writers’ Dreams, The Time Out Book of New York Short Stories, and Dreams Never End and several other novels.

Publisher

Royle owns and manages Nightjar Press, which publishes short stories as signed, limited edition, chapbooks. Nightjar Press has published authors including M. John Harrison, Christopher Kenworthy, Joel Lane, Alison Moore and Michael Marshall Smith

Academic career

Royle is a Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing in the Manchester Writing School at Manchester Metropolitan University and has been Chair of Judges for the Manchester Fiction Prize since it was launched in 2009.

Novels

Royle is married with two children and lives in Manchester.
Royle shares his name with a Professor of English at the University of Sussex who is an authority on Jacques Derrida, and the author of textbooks, including The Uncanny, and a novel, Quilt. The two writers are often confused with each other.