Neville D. Frankel | |
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Born | Neville David Frankel 7 December 1948 Johannesburg, South Africa |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Dartmouth College (B.A.), University of Toledo (M.A.), University of Toronto (Ph.D., ABD) |
Genre | Literary fiction, historical fiction |
Notable awards | Emmy (1984), National Jewish Book Award finalist (2017) |
Website | |
www |
Neville Frankel (born 7 December 1948) is a South Africa-born, American writer of literary and historical fiction. His novels include The Third Power (1980), Bloodlines (2012) and On the Sickle's Edge (2017). He received an Emmy for his work on a BBC documentary in 1984.[1]
Frankel was also a financial planner for more than thirty years.[2]
Born in Johannesburg, South Africa, Frankel immigrated to the United States with his family in 1962 at the age of 14. He majored in English at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, where he graduated in 1972. He earned an MA in English literature from the University of Toledo in 1976. He subsequently pursued doctoral work in English literature at the University of Toronto.[3]
Frankel’s first published book was The Third Power (1980), a political thriller about the transformation of Rhodesia to Zimbabwe.[1][4]
He was the program consultant[5] for the Emmy award-winning[6] documentary, The Mind of a Murderer: Part 1, produced by the BBC/Frontline in 1984.
In 2005 Frankel resumed his writing career and published Bloodlines, a novel set in South Africa’s anti-apartheid era, in 2012.[7][8]
In 2017 Frankel published On the Sickle's Edge, a novel set in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the 20th century and inspired by the author's own family story.[9] On the Sickle's Edge was selected as a 2017 National Jewish Book Award finalist in the Book Club Award category.[10]
Frankel is married and has three grown children and five grandchildren. He is also an avid painter and mountain hiker.[3]