David Massey (author)
David Massey is a British, award winning novelist. Massey is published in the UK and Europe by The Chicken House and in the United States by Chicken House USA, an imprint of Scholastic Corporation
Career
Massey began his writing career in 1989 as a reviewer for Brum Beat, and then for Focus newspapers in Birmingham. At the same time he began work as a presenter/producer for Network Eleven, a satellite sustaining service broadcasting from studios in Walsall. He went on to write and produce for a satellite sustaining service run by the charitable arm of IM Group in West Bromwich and then to install radio studios for them in the UK, Africa and Miami. In 2004 Massey set up an online eco-business which he runs with his wife. The business was a semi finalist in the HSBC Startup Stars Awards 2009, and in 2012, won the Business in the Community award for excellence in the Climate Business Resilience category.
His first break into writing came through UK publishing company, The Chicken House run by Barry Cunningham.[1] The Chicken House published David's first novel, TORN in August 2012 which was Lancashire Book of the Year winner the following year.[2] In its first full year of circulation, TORN[3] was long-listed for the Branford Boase Award, and the Waterstone's Children's Book Prize. David's first novel has also been voted one of the most important books of 2014 in the United States by a group of twelve educators from the National Council for the Social Studies[4] and has been nominated for the Georgia Peach awards 2014/15.[5] World Book Day[6] March 2013 saw the release of David's second YA or young adult fiction novel, TAKEN[7] in the UK.
Personal life
Massey was born in the West Midlands to Robert Massey and Beryl Massey. His early schooling was at Ryland Bedford, followed by an honors degree in combined arts at the University Of Central England (now known as Birmingham City University) where he also earned his QTS Qualified Teacher Status. In 1989 David led an aid expedition to Romania in the wake of the Romanian Revolution, visiting Timișoara and Bucharest where his team were tasked with locating and reporting on the state of local orphanages. On his return David and the team visited the Berlin Wall and witnessed the destruction first hand.
He married his wife Deborah Massey in 2002 and moved to the Stourbridge area in November of the same year, where they continue to reside.
References
- ↑ "That magical day when Barry met Harry". The Scotsman. 15 September 2005. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
- ↑ "The Lancashire Book of the Year". Lancashire Book of the Year.
- ↑ "Torn published by The Chicken House".
- ↑ "The Georgia Peach Awards".
- ↑ "The launch of Taken on World Book Day". Stourbridge News. 9 March 2014.
- ↑ "Taken published by The Chicken House".
External links
- Chicken House Books - official website
- Scholastic Books – official website
- David Massey - Official website