Jake Lamar
After graduating from Harvard University, Lamar spent six years writing for ''Time magazine''. He has lived in Paris since 1993 and teaches creative writing at Sciences Po. At age 30, he published a memoir, ''Bourgeois Blues'', in which he evoked his relationship with his father. With it, he won the Lyndhurst Prize. In 1993, he moved to Paris in the 18th arrondissement where he still resides.
After a near fatal heart problem in 2015, Lamar wrote an article in the ''Los Angeles Times'' on the quality of the socialist system of health care in France. His most recent work, ''Viper's Dream'' (No Exit Press, 2023) is a crime novel set in the jazz world of Harlem between the years 1936 and 1961. A version of ''Viper's Dream'' was broadcast (in French) as a 10-episode radio play in 2019. That production included many jazz tracks of the period. ''Viper's Dream'' was published in French as a novel by Rivages/Noir in 2021. ''Viper's Dream'' was published in the US by Crooked Lane Books in 2023.
In July 2024, ''Viper's Dream'' received the prestigious Crime Writers' Association Historical Dagger Award. In December 2024, ''Das schwarze Chamäleon'', the German translation of his novel ''If 6 Were 9'', won the German Crime Fiction Award in the international category. Provided by Wikipedia