Bulloch was born at
East Dulwich Hospital, London, in 1969 and grew up in
Tooting. He first attended Rosemead School, then
Whitgift School, where he opened the bowling for the 1st XI. In 1981 he performed with the Children's Music Theatre (now
National Youth Music Theatre) at the
Edinburgh Fringe in a production directed by
Jeremy James Taylor, which was also filmed for
Granada Television the same year. He returned to the Fringe in 1983 and 1989, appearing latterly in
Silver, written by
Jonathan Smith and directed by
Anthony Seldon. After taking a first in Modern Languages at
Bristol University, he obtained an MA with distinction in Central European History at the
School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES). He took a couple of years out from studying to teach French and German at
St Dunstan's College in London, then resumed with a PhD in interwar Austrian history in which he was supervised by
Martyn Rady. He taught German language and Central European History at SSEES,
UCL,
King's College London and
Warwick University, and he is the author of a book on
Karl Renner in the 'Makers of the Modern World' series. Recent translations include
Organ Speak by
Giulia Enders,
Lázár by Nelio Biedermann and
The Buried City by the Director of Pompeii Gabriel Zuchtriegel (Hodder Press). His best known work is ''
Look Who's Back by Timur Vermes (MacLehose Press), which was longlisted for the 2016 IMPAC award and 2015 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. His translation of Portrait of the Mother as a Young Woman
was praised by the Times Literary Supplement''. He and his wife, Katharina Bielenberg, jointly translated
Daniel Glattauer's hit novel,
Love Virtually, and its sequel,
Every Seventh Wave, both of which were adapted into radio plays starring
David Tennant and
Emilia Fox. His translation of
Hinterland by
Arno Geiger won the 2023 Schlegel-Tieck prize, his second award following
The Mussel Feast in 2014. He has been shortlisted on three further occasions, and runner-up twice. In 2021 he had two books on the shortlist for the Schlegel-Tieck Prize. Eight of his translations have been nominated for the Dublin Literary Award.
Zen and the Art of Murder was shortlisted for the 2018 Crime Writers Association International Dagger. Another of Bulloch's translations is the 2017
German Book Prize winner,
The Capital by
Robert Menasse (MacLehose Press). Since 2013 Jamie has been a member of the New Books in German committee. ==Personal life==