Samantha Harvey is an English novelist known for her contemplative and lyrical prose. Best known for her novels and memoir, Harvey's work ranges from human psychology themes to characters' existential reflections in isolated settings. Her notable novels include The Wilderness (2009), The Western Wind (2018) and Orbital (2023), the latter of which won the Booker Prize in 2024, one of Britain's most prestigious literary awards.
Born in Ditton, Kent, Samantha Harvey spent her early years in a working-class family. Following her parents' divorce, her mother moved to Ireland, and Harvey's childhood was marked by moves, including stints in York, Sheffield and Japan.
She studied Philosophy at the Universities of York and Sheffield and completed an MA in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University in 2005. Harvey also completed a PhD in Creative Writing, which laid the foundations for her introspective, nuanced writing style.
Harvey's debut novel, The Wilderness, captures the deteriorating mind of a man with Alzheimer's, a perspective rendered through increasingly fragmented prose. This innovative work won Harvey the AMI Literature Award and the Betty Trask Prize, marking her early career with critical acclaim.
Her subsequent works have continued to explore complex human emotions and moral issues. All Is Song (2012), loosely inspired by the life of Socrates, explores the tension between moral duty and societal norms.
Her third novel, Dear Thief (2014), is a raw, introspective letter from a woman to an estranged friend, exploring themes of love, betrayal and memory. The Western Wind, set in a 15th-century English village, follows a priest as he unravels a mystery amid turbulent waters, both literal and metaphorical. This historical novel won the 2019 Staunch Book Prize.
In 2020, Harvey moved into non-fiction with The Shapeless Unease, an account of her battle with insomnia, praised for its frank and visceral portrayal of insomnia and its psychological effects. Harvey's latest work, Orbital (2023), delves into the lives of six astronauts orbiting the Earth on a mission of beauty and fragility.
Observing the planet from the International Space Station, the characters grapple with isolation, camaraderie and Earth's profound beauty. As they experience 16 sunrises and sunsets daily, Harvey uses their journey to meditate on humanity's place in the cosmos.
Acclaimed by critics and fellow writers alike, Orbital was described by Mark Haddon as "one of the most beautiful novels I have read in a long time". The novel was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and the Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction in 2024 and won both the InWords Literary Award and the Hawthornden Prize.
On accepting the Booker Prize, Harvey remarked, "Why on earth would anyone want to hear from a woman at her desk in Wiltshire writing about space?"
Samantha Harvey lives in Bath, UK, and is a Reader in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University.
Photo credit: www.samanthaharvey.co.uk