Adrian Czajkowski | |
---|---|
Born | 1972 Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire, England, United Kingdom | (age 52)
Occupation | Author and legal executive |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Reading |
Period | 2008 – present |
Genre | Fantasy and science fiction[1] |
Subject | Zoology and psychology |
Notable works | Shadows of the Apt series Children of Time Dogs of War |
Notable awards | Arthur C. Clarke Award (2016) Hugo Award for Best Series (2023)[a] |
Children | 1 |
Website | |
www |
Adrian Czajkowski (spelt as Adrian Tchaikovsky for his books; born June 1972) is a British fantasy and science fiction author. He is best known for his series Shadows of the Apt, and for his Hugo Award-winning[a] Children of Time series.[2]
Children of Time was awarded the 30th Arthur C. Clarke Award in 2016. Author James Lovegrove described it as "superior stuff, tackling big themes – gods, messiahs, artificial intelligence, alienness – with brio".[3]
Adrian Czajkowski was born in Lincolnshire in Woodhall Spa in June 1972.[4] He is of Polish descent.[5] He cites the natural world as an early influence, along with naturalists such as Gerald Durrell and David Attenborough, and he was fascinated by the Natural History Museum. "From there", he says in interview, "wanting to understand the behaviour – the minds – of the nonhuman started to take precedence."[6]
He studied zoology and psychology at the University of Reading, although he eventually became disillusioned with the content of the course.[7] He then qualified as a legal executive.[8] He was employed as a legal executive for the Commercial Dispute Department of Blacks, Solicitors, of Leeds[9] until late 2018, when he became a full time writer.[8]
Tchaikovsky's first foray into writing was in 1996, when he submitted several stories for publication in Xenos magazine. In the early 2000 he won Xenos's annual competition with the short story The Roar of the Crowd, only for the magazine to fold pre-publication.[10]
In 2008, after Tchaikovsky had spent fifteen years trying to get published, his novel Empire in Black and Gold was finally published by Tor Books (UK) – an imprint of Pan Macmillan – in the United Kingdom.[11] The series was later published in America by Pyr Books. Tchaikovsky expressed the desire that the Polish editions of his novels feature the original Polish spelling of his surname,[12] but these too used "Tchaikovsky".[13]
On 23 January 2019, Tchaikovsky was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of the Arts by the University of Lincoln.[14]
He lives in Leeds with his wife and son.[15][16][17]
Tchaikovsky revealed the basis of Shadows of the Apt in an online essay entitled "Entering the Shadows" at Upcoming4.me.[18]
Whilst studying at the University of Reading he managed a role-playing game named Bugworld. The game concerned the story of the insect-people of the Lowlands, threatened by the encroaching Wasp Empire. From this original scenario the entire series of books grew.[19]
Tchaikovsky still uses role-playing games to help develop his stories, but now also uses live action role-playing, which assists in describing the numerous action and battle sequences in his books. He is currently involved with the LARP game Empire.[20]
Tchaikovsky has regularly expressed his intention regarding the Shadows of the Apt series not to make science better than magic,[21] or vice versa: "This is another key element, really: the magic/tech divide is a concept that turns up here and there in fantasy, but usually one side is good (mostly magic) and the other (dirty polluting tech) is bad. With the world of the kinden, they’re basically both as bad as the people who use them, whether it’s blood sacrifice in a Mantis-kinden grove or the Wasp Empire’s city-levelling weaponry."[22]
Themes in Tchaikovsky's books include: "the frailties of human bureaucracy and the difficulty we have in seeing beyond the human perspective,"[23] and "the terrible things we do to each other and the dogged resistance offered by the victim-participants in the vile mills of misery that are totalizing governments and wars of aggression."[24] Critics have commented positively on his "definitive" depiction of alien civilizations[25] and his treatment of "huge themes about belief, artificial intelligence, legacy, discovery, alienness and much more."[26] In an interview with Jon Sutton for the British Psychological Society, Tchaikovsky says that "Human perception of time is one of the biggest limitations of being human," and that this shortcoming lies behind many current problems, such as climate change.[27]
Tchaikovsky has received the following literary awards and nominations:
§ | Indicates a declined award |
---|
Year | Work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Children of Time | Arthur C. Clarke Award | Won | [3] |
2017 | The Tiger and the Wolf | British Fantasy Award for Best Fantasy Novel | Won | [28] |
2019 | Children of Ruin | BSFA Award for Best Novel | Won | [29] |
2020 | The Doors of Eden | Philip K. Dick Award | Nominated | [30] |
Sidewise Award for Alternate History for Long-form | Won | [31][32] | ||
2021 | Shards of Earth | BSFA Award for Best Novel | Won | [29] |
2022 | City of Last Chances | BSFA Award for Best Novel | Won | [29] |
Elder Race | Hugo Award for Best Novella | Nominated | [33] | |
2023 | Ogres | Hugo Award for Best Novella | Nominated | [34] |
The Children of Time series | Hugo Award for Best Series | Won§[a] | [36] | |
And Put Away Childish Things | BSFA for Best Shorter Fiction | Won | [29] |
Shadows of the Apt
Main novels
Tales of the Apt (short story collections in the Apt universe)
Children of Time
Echoes of the Fall
Bioforms
The Tyrant Philosophers
Standalone novels
After the War series
Redemption's Blade (Solaris Books, 2018), ISBN 978-1-78108-579-0, is the first book in a multi-author series. The series was continued with Salvation's Fire by Justina Robson and published on 4 September 2018.
Tchaikovsky's first Warhammer 40,000 novel Day of Ascension (2022), like his short story "Raised in Darkness" from Inferno! Volume 6 (2021), concerns the insidious Genestealer Cults.
However, as the possibility of the Polish rights being sold seems extremely viable, there is an epilogue to this tale of Frankish ignorance, for in Poland, one would strongly assume, I may finally see my name in print in its unadulterated form.