Tom Rob Smith
Tom Rob Smith (born 1979) is an English author and screenwriter known for his thriller novels and television work.[1] Born to a Swedish mother and an English father, both antique dealers, he was raised in South London, where he continues to reside.[1] Smith studied English literature at St John's College, Cambridge, graduating in 2001, before pursuing creative writing and early jobs in television storylining.[2] His debut novel, Child 44 (2008), a historical thriller set in Stalinist Russia inspired by real events, achieved international acclaim, selling over two million copies and earning awards including the CWA Steel Dagger, a Man Booker Prize longlisting, and a Costa First Novel shortlisting.[3] The book launched the Child 44 trilogy, comprising The Secret Speech (2009) and Agent 6 (2011), which explored themes of Soviet-era intrigue and moral ambiguity. Subsequent standalone novels include The Farm (2014), a psychological thriller drawing from his mother's mental health crisis and becoming a #1 international bestseller, and Cold People (2023), a science fiction work.[3][4] In screenwriting, Smith adapted his novel into the BBC miniseries London Spy (2015) and contributed to acclaimed television, notably earning a Writer's Guild Award, Emmy, and Golden Globe for American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace (2018). He created the FX series Class of '09 (2023), focusing on FBI training.[3][5] Smith's works often blend personal and historical elements, prioritizing narrative tension over strict historical fidelity, which has drawn both praise for accessibility and critique for dramatization.[3]