Foulds was educated at
Bancroft's School, read English at
St Catherine's College, Oxford under
Craig Raine, and graduated with an MA in creative writing from the
University of East Anglia in 2001. In 2007, Foulds published his first book,
The Truth About These Strange Times. The novel, which is set in the present day, is concerned in part with the
World Memory Championships. In 2008, Foulds published a substantial narrative poem entitled
The Broken Word, described by the critic Peter Kemp as a "verse novella". It is a fictional version of some events during the
Mau Mau Uprising. Writing in
The Guardian,
David Wheatley suggested that "The Broken Word is a moving and pitiless depiction of the world as it is rather than as we might like it to be, and the terrible things we do to defend our place in it". In 2009, his novel
The Quickening Maze was published. Recommending the work in a 'books of the year' survey, novelist
Julian Barnes declared: 'Having last year greatly admired Adam Foulds's long poem "The Broken Word", I uncharitably wondered whether his novel
The Quickening Maze (Cape) might allow me to tacitly advise him to stick to verse. Some hope: this story of the Victorian lunatic asylum where the poet
John Clare and
Tennyson's brother Septimus were incarcerated is the real thing. It's not a "poetic novel" either, but a novelistic novel, rich in its understanding and representation of the mad, the sane, and that large overlapping category in between'. On 7 January 2010, he was published on the Guardian's "Over by Over" (OBO) coverage of day five of the Third Test of the South Africa v England series at
Newlands, Cape Town. Foulds's published email corrected the OBO writer, Andy Bull, who, in the 77th over, posted lines by Donne in reference to Ian Ronald Bell in verse form: "No doubt I won't be the first pedant to let you know that the Donne you quote is in fact from a prose meditation. The experiment in retrofitting twentieth century free verse technique to it is interesting but the line breaks shouldn't really be there." In 2013 he was included in the Granta list of 20 best young writers. He currently lives in
Toronto,
Ontario, after marrying Canadian photographer Charla Jones. ==Awards and honours==