
John Andrew Sutherland is an English lecturer, emeritus professor, newspaper columnist and author. Now Emeritus Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern English Literature at University College London, John Sutherland began his academic career after graduating from the University of Leicester as an assistant lecturer in Edinburgh in 1964. He specialises in Victorian fiction, 20th century literature, and the history of publishing. Apart from writing a regular column in the The Guardian newspaper, Sutherland has published seventeen (as of 2004) books and is editing the forthcoming Oxford Companion to Popular Fiction. The series of books which starts with Was Heathcliff a Murderer? has brought him a wide readership. The books in the series are collections of essays. Each essay takes a piece of classic fiction, almost always from the Victorian period. Carefully going over every word of the text, Sutherland highlights apparent inconsistencies, anachronisms and oversights, and explains references which the modern reader is likely to overlook. In some cases he demonstrates the likelihood that the author simply forgot a minor detail. In others, apparent slips on the part of the author are presented as evidence that something is going on beyond the surface of the book which is not explicitly described (such as his explanation for why Sherlock Holmes should mis-address Miss Stoner as Miss Roylott in "The Adventure of the Speckled Band"). In 2001, he published Last Drink to LA, a moving chronicle of his alcoholism and his return to sobriety. In 2005, he was involved in Dot Mobile's project to translate summaries and quotes of classic literature into text messaging shorthand. In the same year he was also Chair of Judges for the Booker Prize. In June 2007 he published an autobiography: The Boy Who Loved Books: A Memoir. On 18 December 2007 his annotated edition of Robert Louis Stevenson's The Black Arrow was released by Penguin Books.
Series
Books

Literary Landscapes
Charting the Worlds of Classic Literature
2018

The Brontësaurus
An A-Z of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë
2016

Curiosities of Literature
A Feast for Book Lovers
2008

How Good Is Your Grammar?
2015

Bestsellers
A Very Short Introduction
2007

Who Betrays Elizabeth Bennet?
Further Puzzles in Classic Fiction
1999

Where Was Rebecca Shot. Curiosities, Puzzles, and Conundrums in Modern Fiction
1999

Monica Jones, Philip Larkin and Me
Her Life and Long Loves
2021

Can Jane Eyre Be Happy?
More Puzzles in Classic Fiction
1997

How to Read a Novel
A User's Guide
2006

Stephen Spender
A Literary Life
2004

Jumbo
The Unauthorised Biography of a Victorian Sensation
2013

Reading the Decades
2002

Orwell's Nose
A Pathological Biography
2016

50 Literature Ideas You Really Need to Know
2010

So You Think You Know Jane Austen?
A Literary Quizbook
2005

The Dickens Dictionary
An A-Z of Britain's Greatest Novelist
2012

The Literary Detective
100 Puzzles in Classic Fiction
2000

How to be Well Read
A guide to 500 great Novels and a handful of literary curiosities
2012

Is Heathcliff a Murderer?
Puzzles in Nineteenth-Century Fiction
1996

Crossing the Line
Lessons From a Life on Duty
2021

Henry V, War Criminal? and Other Shakespeare Puzzles
2000

A Little History of Literature
2013

The War On The Old
2016

Love, Sex, Death and Words
Surprising Tales from a Year in Literature
2010

The Boy Who Loved Books
2008

Classics of British Literature
2008

Lives of the Novelists
A History of Fiction in 294 Lives
2007