Mark Crick

Mark Crick is a British photographer and author, best known for his literary parodies Kafka's Soup and Sartre's Sink, in which he presents recipes and DIY tips in the style of famous literary writers. Mark Crick is married to Fiona Simmons Crick.

Crick grew up in Basildon. As a child he suffered from chronic asthma which made both eating[1] and sleeping difficult.[2] to which he attributes his love of both reading and cookery.[1]

Crick studied literature at Warwick University and the University of London.

Paul Auster has asked Mark Crick to write a pastiche of Auster's work. Crick says that he felt honoured to be asked but has not yet succeeded.[3]

Books

gollark: I may have some work to do.
gollark: +<markov 509849474647064576 10
gollark: ?tag not found
gollark: So, minor bug, it turns out that the rate limiting was very enthusiastic and [REDACTED] total control over certain unpatched network infrastructure.
gollark: Hey, I could plot event bus messages as a proportion of all traffic, that would be fun.

References

  1. Catherine Milner (27 August 2005). "If Kafka made the dinner..." The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  2. Joanna Rabiger (8 September 2006). "In the Kitchen with Kafka". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  3. Jennifer Lesieur (16 December 2010). "Mark Crick bricoleur de pastiches". Metro. Retrieved 30 May 2011. In French


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