David Szalay β Hungarian-British novelist and short-story writer whose spare, incisive prose explores identity, money, masculinity and the everyday under-belly of Europe. Notable works include London and the South-East, All That Man Is and Flesh (Booker Prize 2025).
π Born in 1974 in Montreal to a Hungarian father and Canadian mother; raised in London, now based in Vienna. π Studied at Oxford and worked in advertising before turning to fiction. π Debut novel London and the South-East won the Betty Trask and Geoffrey Faber Memorial prizes. π All That Man Is (2016) was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and won the Gordon Burn Prize. βοΈ Turbulence (2018) unfolds through twelve interlinked stories named after airport codes. ποΈ His minimalist style focuses on whatβs left unsaid β tension, silence, small gestures. πΆ Themes include social mobility, masculinity, commerce, and alienation in contemporary Europe. π§³ His characters often drift and wait rather than act, revealing the texture of modern restlessness. π Flesh (2025) follows a Hungarian man through decades of migration, wealth, and moral unease. π€£ Fun fact: he was listed among the βTop 20 British Writers under 40.β