Gareth Rubin
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Gareth Rubin | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1976 (age 49–50) England, UK |
| Occupation | Novelist, journalist |
| Language | English |
| Nationality | British |
| Alma mater | University of St Andrews East 15 Acting School |
| Genre | Thriller, High-concept fiction |
| Notable works | The Turnglass, Holmes and Moriarty |
| Website | |
| garethrubin | |
Gareth Rubin (born 1976) is an English novelist and journalist. He has published five novels and writes on cultural and social topics for British newspapers, having worked for many years at The Observer as a features writer and opinion columnist.[1][non-primary source needed]
Rubin's novels are largely in the high-concept thriller genre, and several experiment with story structure. For example, The Turnglass (2023) is a tête-bêche novel in which two linked stories in the same volume are published back to back and upside down in relation to each other, giving the book two front covers and two first pages.
The sequel to The Turnglass, The Waterfall (2025), is described as "a story within a story within a story within a story",[2] featuring four imaginary books, dating from Jacobean times to the 1940s, that each play a significant role in the book that follows them.
He has also written Holmes and Moriarty (2024), a new Sherlock Holmes novel endorsed by the estate of Arthur Conan Doyle, which features dual narration by Dr Watson and Colonel Moran.
Rubin was born and grew up in Kent, and studied at the University of St Andrews, graduating in English. He went on to study acting at East 15 Acting School.[3][non-primary source needed] Rubin worked as a TV critic for Time Out, then as a freelance arts and features writer for The Independent and The Observer.[citation needed]