Patrick Gale born 31 January 1962
Patrick Gale is a British author.
Patrick was born on on the Isle of Wight, where his father was prison governor at Camp Hill, as his grandfather had been at nearby Parkhurst. The youngest of four children, the family moved to London, where his father ran Wandsworth Prison, then to Winchester. At eight Patrick began boarding as a Winchester College Quirister at the cathedral choir school, Pilgrim’s. At thirteen he went on to Winchester College. He finished his formal education with an English degree from New College, Oxford in 1983.
He has never had 'a grown-up job'. For three years he lived at a succession of addresses, from a Notting Hill bedsit to a crumbling French chateau. While working on his first novels he eked out his slender income with odd jobs: as a typist, a singing waiter, a designer’s secretary, a ghost-writer for an encyclopedia of the musical and, increasingly, as a book reviewer for The Daily Telegraph.
His first two novels, The Aerodynamics of Pork and Ease were published by Abacus on the same day in June 1986. The following year he moved to Camelford near the north coast of Cornwall and began a love affair with the county that has fed his work ever since.
He has written more than ten novels, a number of short stories and novellas in addition to a non-fiction book about the American novelist Armistead Maupin, with whom he has a close friendship.
He now lives in the far south-west, on a farm near Land’s End with his lover, Aidan Hicks. They raise beef cattle for the open market and broccoli for Sainsbury’s. His current ambition is to perfect the art of reversing a tractor and trailer around a corner.
His novel Notes From An Exhibition (2007) become a bestseller following its inclusion in Richard & Judy's influential Book Club. He published a new new novel The Whole Day Through and a cllection of short stories Gentleman's Relish in 2009
Patrick Gale - Official Website