after graduating from the University of Michigan.
Idov’s writing career began at New York Magazine, where his features won three National Magazine Awards. His first book, 2009’s satirical novel Ground Up, sold over 100,000 copies worldwide and was optioned for a series by HBO. From 2012 to 2014, he was the editor-in-chief of GQ Russia, an experience that became the basis for his 2018 memoir Dressed Up for a Riot.
In addition to spy novels The Collaborators (2024) and The Cormorant Hunt (2026), Idov has worked on numerous film and TV projects, including Londongrad, Deutschland 83, Cannes Main Competition title Leto, and his own 2019 directing debut The Humorist. He and his wife and screenwriting partner, Lily, divide their time between Los Angeles, Berlin, and Portugal.
[Writers Read: Michael Idov (October 2009); Q&A with Michael Idov]
At CrimeReads Idov tagged five favorite books "that work both as excellent spy thrillers and good literature, delivering all the clandestine kicks while treating the reader as an actual adult." One title on the list:
Jonathan Payne, Citizen OrlovRead about the other novels on the list at CrimeReads.
A fishmonger bumbles his way into a royal assassination plot in a silly yet hyperliterate sendup of both Kafka and Graham Greene. The setting—a made-up Eastern European backwater that feels about eighty percent Czech—is half the fun, but, amazingly, the madcap plot with its innumerable twists works on its own, too. The result is a hoot and a half that practically begs to be a Wes Anderson film.
Q&A with Jonathan Payne.
--Marshal Zeringue
