Emily St. John Mandel

Author

Birth Year 1979

Birthplace Merville, British Columbia, Canada

Age 45 years old

Nationality Canada

#27586 Most Popular

1979

Emily St. John Mandel ( born 1979) is a Canadian novelist and essayist.

Mandel was born in spring 1979 in Merville, British Columbia, Canada.

Her Canadian mother is a social worker and her American father is a plumber.

St. John, her grandmother's surname, is her middle name.

When she was ten years old, she moved with her parents and four siblings to Denman Island, which is 20 miles south of Merville near Union Bay.

She was home-schooled there until the age of fifteen, during which time she began keeping a daily diary.

She left high school when she was eighteen to study contemporary dance at The School of Toronto Dance Theatre.

She worked with independent choreographers.

She was also administrative assistant at a Manhattan law firm and helped with grants at the Anderson Center for Cancer Research at Rockefeller University.

2002

In 2002, Mandel began writing her first novel, Last Night in Montreal, while living in Montreal.

She is a staff writer for The Millions, an online magazine.

2008

The Lola Quartet is a literary noir novel that takes place in Florida following the 2008 economic collapse.

Gavin, a recently fired journalist and former jazz musician, is contacted by his sister who believes she has discovered a daughter he never knew he had.

Jobless, Gavin returns to his hometown and begins searching for his unknown child and the supposed mother—his high school girlfriend.

2009

Mandel's first three novels are Last Night in Montreal (2009), The Singer's Gun (2009), and The Lola Quartet (2012).

Unbridled Books published all three novels.

Last Night in Montreal, follows a young woman with a secret who cannot seem to settle in one city.

When she is pursued by a private detective and a former lover, she is forced to come to terms with her own past and the secrets that haunt a childhood she cannot remember.

The Singer's Gun tells the story of Anton Waker, who grew up surrounded by corruption, but has now decided to live a more honourable life.

His life unravels when his cousin blackmails him into doing one last job.

As a result, his forged Harvard diploma is revealed, and his secretary disappears.

Anton must choose between his loyalty to his family and his desire to live life with integrity.

2012

In 2012, she used the Goodreads database to write an article for The Millions, analyzing statistics relating to novels with titles in "The ___'s Daughter" pattern.

2014

She has written six novels, including Station Eleven (2014), The Glass Hotel (2020), and Sea of Tranquility (2022).

Station Eleven, which has been translated into 33 languages, has been adapted into a limited series on HBO Max.

Mandel's fourth novel, Station Eleven (2014), is a post-apocalyptic novel set in the near future in a world ravaged by the effects of a virus and follows a troupe of Shakespearean actors who travel from town to town around the Great Lakes region.

It was nominated for the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, and won the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the Toronto Book Award.

A film adaptation of the novel was developed by producer Scott Steindorff.

The resulting ten-episode limited mini-series on HBO Max, Station Eleven, premiered on December 16, 2021.

Station Eleven was selected for the 2023 edition of Canada Reads, where it was championed by Michael Greyeyes.

2016

In 2016, she wrote a subsequent article, analyzing statistics relating to novels that included the word "girl" in the title.

One of her findings was that the girl of the title is "significantly more likely to end up dead" if the author of the book is male.

2019

In August 2019, NBCUniversal International Studios acquired the rights to The Glass Hotel for a television series adaptation, with producer Lark Productions.

Mandel is writing the screenplay.

Mandel's sixth novel, Sea of Tranquility, was published in 2022.

It is a work of speculative fiction and explores questions pertaining to time travel and the simulation hypothesis.

It debuted at number 3 on The New York Times Best Seller list for "Combined Print & E-Book Fiction," and number 2 for "Hardcover Fiction."

2020

The Glass Hotel was translated into twenty languages and was selected by Barack Obama as one of his favorite books of 2020.

Sea of Tranquility was published in April 2022 and debuted at number three on The New York Times Best Seller list.

Her fifth novel, a mystery thriller titled The Glass Hotel, was shortlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020 and was recommended by Barack Obama when he released a list of his favourite books from 2020.