T E Shepherd
AUTHOR

T E Shepherd

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Thomas was born in 1973 and grew up in Lowestoft, Suffolk before moving to Cheshire to study a degree in Creative Arts. Having worked as an electronic production editor for science and academic publishers in Oxford, he now works as a web designer. He lives in Oxfordshire with his wife Emma and their seven cats, four chickens and two bunnies and some fish. He's different. He's not your usual person. Lots of people can say that about themselves but with Thomas it's true. Just ask his wife! He only discovered how different in the last ten years when he discovered that he has Asperger's Syndrome, which is on the mild end of the autism spectrum. In subtle, subconscious ways it affects his writing. For someone who is, on occasion, somewhat clueless and inept in social situations, he has been praised on his dialogue. As a person he also have difficulty reading visual cues and body-language and consequently his editors often tell me he's telling too much when I should be showing. Show not tell they say and I have to really work hard to achieve that! His favourite authors are Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones, Susan Cooper and David Almond. In 1989 his short story, Gold, was highly commended in the WHSmiths Young Writers' Competition and in 1991 he began writing screenplays, including a new children's television series, Dreamscholars which received some initial interest from the producers of ITV's award-winning Press Gang. Whilst at university Thomas co‐edited and contributed to Moments of Cragg Vale, an anthology of short stories and poetry, and in 1993, Flat East, a poem about the landscape of East Anglia was selected for publication in Valleys of Thought, an anthology of poems by local writers. In 1995, a project proposal and pilot script for Riverhouse was highly commended in the Meridian Broadcasting Television Ideas Competition at the Southampton University Writers' Conference. This led to him writing a youth drama series Eurojournal, based on his own experiences studying French at Eurocentre La Rochelle. The series was to be ground‐breaking in its style, with the use of rapid scene changes acting almost as metaphors for the advancement of the story - a style which developed into his novel‐writing style. Thomas has Icelandic family, and in 2001 he made the first of three visits to their country. He knew from the very beginning that with a country so rich in myth and folklore and with an environment unlike anything he had ever seen, he had to write a story set there. The End of All Worlds is that story - begun in August 2001 only to be halted on 21 October for one and a half years after the family home burnt down. It took six years to write and over three years of rewrites and edits to complete.
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