Keith Lowe (author)
Keith Lowe (author)
Keith Lowe (born 1970, in London) is a British author and historian.
His first novel, *Tunnel Vision * (2001, ISBN 0-09-941668-9), follows a man who is challenged to visit every station of the London Underground in a single day, and was shortlisted for the Author's Club First Novel Award. His second novel, New Free Chocolate Sex (2005), is about the ruthless world of chocolate marketing, and describes the hostile relationship between a chocolate company executive and a journalist who spend a weekend locked in a chocolate factory together.
Lowe has published two critically acclaimed history books about the Second World War and its aftermath. Inferno (2007) described the firebombing of Hamburg by the British and American air forces in 1943, which destroyed most of the city and resulted in approximately 40,000 civilian deaths. It was reviewed extensively in the British press. His next book, Savage Continent (2012), is a history of Europe in the aftermath of the Second World War, which covers the lawlessness, chaos and unconstrained violence that gripped the continent in the years 1944 to 1949. It argues that the war did not end neatly at all, but in fact continued in various guises for several years after the official ceasefire in May 1945. It covers a variety of controversial issues such as postwar vengeance, ethnic cleansing, and the many civil wars which took place across Europe.
Lowe grew up in Hampstead in London, and studied English Literature at the University of Manchester. After twelve years as a history editor at Cassell he left his job in 2010 to become a full-time writer. His books have been translated into German, Swedish, Japanese, Serbian, French, Italian, Spanish, Polish, Greek, Portuguese, Estonian, Norwegian, Russian, Slovene and Czech.
Awards and honours
Publications
Tunnel Vision (2001, ISBN 0-09-941668-9)
New Free Chocolate Sex (2005)
*Inferno: The Devastation of Hamburg * (2007, ISBN 978-0-670-91557-6)
Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II (2012, ISBN 978-0-670-91746-4)
The Fear and the Freedom: How the Second World War Changed Us (2017, ISBN 0670923516 / 978-06709 23529)