Jake Arnott (born 1961, in Buckinghamshire) is an English novelist, who now lives in North London. His first book was
The Long Firm. In 2005 he was ranked as one of Britain's 100 most influential gay and lesbian people.. Even so, he has been in a heterosexual relationship with the hitherto lesbian writer and novelist, Stephanie Theobald, since 2005.
Having left Aylesbury Grammar School at 17 he attended University - he drifted through various jobs including a labourer, mortuary technician, artist's model and theatrical agency assistant - he finally became an actor with the Red Ladder Company in Leeds and appeared as a mummy in the film
The Mummy. He came out as bisexual in his twenties. His hardboiled crime writings are similar to those of Nicholas Blincoe, Thomas Kelly and David Peace.
- His first novel The Long Firm was published in 1999 and tells of Harry Starks, a homosexual East End gangster in the 1960s based on the Kray twins. A notable feature is that the story is told from five different points of view. It was later serialised on BBC television starring Derek Jacobi, Phil Daniels and Mark Strong, and broadcast in July 2004.
- His second novel He Kills Coppers was published in 2001 and tells of a criminal on the run, based on real life cop killer Harry Roberts, the tale starting in 1966, the year of England's World Cup triumph, through to the Margaret Thatcher era, the Greenham Common protests of the 1980s and the Poll Tax riots. It was later adapted for television, appearing on ITV1 in the UK in March and April 2008.
- His third novel truecrime (2003) takes up the story of a gangster found dead at Starks' Spanish villa at the end of The Long Firm. The dead man's daughter wants to flush out Harry Starks, whom she suspects of the murder (she is an actress and uses the making of a film about old time British gangsters as a means of tempting his appearance).
Johnny Come Home
His fourth novel
Johnny Come Home (2006) shifts from a focus on the criminal underworld to the early 1970s with a plot involving The Angry Brigade and a glam rock star inspired by Gary Glitter.
Johnny Come Home had been withdrawn from sale in the UK due to the presence of a villainous former bandleader named Tony Rocco; there is a real former bandleader of that name, who objected to the character's name. The book has now been reissued with the character's name changed to Timothy Royal. Tony Rocco and Hodder & Stoughton - Press Release
The Devil's Paintbrush
His fifth novel,
The Devil's Paintbrush (2009) is set in Paris in 1903, and deals with an encounter between disgraced former British Army officer Sir Hector Macdonald and the occultist Aleister Crowley. [1]