Robert McCrum | |
---|---|
Born | John Robert McCrum (1953-07-07)7 July 1953 (age 71) Cambridge, England |
Education | Sherborne School |
Alma mater | Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University of Pennsylvania |
Occupation(s) | Writer, editor |
Parent(s) | Michael William McCrum and Christine McCrum[1] |
Website | robertmccrumuk |
John Robert McCrum (born 7 July 1953) is an English writer andeditor who held senior editorial positions atFaber & Faber over seventeen years, followed by a long association withThe Observer.
The son ofMichael William McCrum, aCambridge-educatedancient historian, Robert McCrum was born in Cambridge on 7 July 1953.[2] He was educated atSherborne School,Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (MA (Cantab)), and theUniversity of Pennsylvania as aThouron Scholar.[1][3]
McCrum was editorial director atFaber & Faber from 1979 to 1989[4] and editor-in-chief there from 1990 to 1996.[5] He served asliterary editor ofThe Observer for more than ten years. In May 2008 he was appointed associate editor ofThe Observer.[6]
McCrum is the co-author ofThe Story of English with William Cran andRobert MacNeil and wroteP. G. Wodehouse: A Life. McCrum's novelSuspicion was published in 1997.[7]
McCrum received an honorary doctorate fromHeriot-Watt University in 2011.[8]
In August 2017, McCrum'sEvery Third Thought: On life, death and the endgame was published,[9] taking its title fromShakespeare's playThe Tempest.[10] The book was adapted and broadcast asBBC Radio 4'sBook of the Week the following month.[11]
In July 1995, McCrum suffered a massive stroke.[12] The devastating experience and his recovery is chronicled inMy Year Off: Recovering Life After a Stroke. He had been married toSarah Lyall, an American journalist, for only two months,[1] and the book includes diary entries made by his wife. He also became a patron of the UK charity Different Strokes, which provides information and support for younger stroke survivors.
Lyall, who writes forThe New York Times, lived in London from 1995 to 2013 and was the newspaper's London correspondent. She returned to New York with the couple's daughters in 2013; Lyall and McCrum later divorced.[13]
McCrum describes himself as "a confused non-believer".[14]