Pickering started his career as a journalist and columnist for
The Times,
The Sunday Times,
Punch and the
Evening Standard, among other publications, but wrote his first novel,
Wild About Harry, after an assignment to
Paraguay to find the war criminal
Josef Mengele. The novel was both a critical and popular success and was long-listed for the
Man Booker Prize. His second novel,
Perfect English, about a young "Internationalista" in combat, as he, himself, had been, His next novel,
The Blue Gate of Babylon, also long-listed for the
Man Booker Prize, was also a best-seller and was chosen by
The New York Times as a notable book of the year and Pickering was chosen as one of
WH Smith's top ten young British novelists.
Charlie Peace, his next controversial novel about the second coming of Christ in modern times, drew the quote from
J. G. Ballard that Pickering was "a truly subversive author" and called the decision not to publish the book in Britain "pure censorship". The controversy led
The Sunday Times to dub him "the de facto Norman Mailer of the British Literati". Pickering went to the
Democratic Republic of the Congo in the last stages of the civil war, and produced ''
The Leopard's Wife to favourable reviews. He then went to Afghanistan for his highly acclaimed novel Over the Rainbow. Pickering’s latest novel, Elephant'', begins in Czarist St Petersburg and is about Pushkin's idea of unselfish and redemptive love and an exceptional African elephant, the only sane being amid wars and refugees, racial conflict and a world gone mad. It is a story written by a lover, knowing his poet love is lost, but wanting to get her writing again. Pickering has written short stories, poems and articles for publications all over the world. His work has been compared to that of
Evelyn Waugh and
Graham Greene, but lately to Don DeLillo, Peter Carey and Bulgakov. == Personal life ==