By the age of 21, Hutchinson had published four volumes of stories:[2]Thumbprints (1978), Fools' Gold (1979), Torn Air (1980) and The Paradise Equation (1981), all under the name David Hutchinson.
Writing as Dave Hutchinson, in 2004 he published As the Crow Flies, his fifth collection of short fiction,[3] and combined elements of horror, science fiction and fantasy. His first novel, The Villages (2001), blends elements of fantasy, science fiction and the supernatural.[4] It was followed by a novella, The Push (2009, NewCon Press), a science fiction story set in space, describing the inception of faster-than-lighttravel and speculating on the possible consequences of humans settling on planets populated by alien beings.[2] It was shortlisted for the 2010 BSFA award for short fiction.[5]
Hutchinson has also edited two anthologies and co-edited a third. His short story "The Incredible Exploding Man" was included in the first Solaris Rising anthology and appeared in the 29th Year’s Best Science Fiction collection.[5]
Recent works
Hutchinson's novel Europe in Autumn (2014), published by Solaris Books (now Rebellion Publishing[6]), is a speculative espionage thriller and takes place in a fragmenting near-future Europe. The central plot involves the protagonist, Estonian chef Rudi, becoming involved in Les Coureurs des Bois, a mysterious postal service that also delivers humans across borders.[7] The novel featured in a number of annual best-of-the-year round-ups, including those of The Guardian,[8]The Huffington Post and Locus magazine. The Los Angeles Review of Books described Europe in Autumn as "one of the most sophisticated science fiction novels of the decade".[9]Europe at Midnight (2015), also published by Solaris/Rebellion, is neither a sequel nor a prequel, but rather a standalone title set in the world created for Europe In Autumn.[10] The second book was included in the 2015 Locus Recommended Reading List.[11]
A third novel in the series, Europe in Winter, was published in November 2016,[12] with the first book's protagonist returning.[13] Hutchinson completed the series with Europe at Dawn in 2018, but indicated there may be a further novella at some point in the future.[14][15] A fifth Fractured Europe novel, Cold Water, with "a new cast of characters", was published in 2022.[16]
Hauthal, Janine (2018). "Chapter 10: 'No Border Can Hold Him' Transnational Discourses in Contemporary British Spy Novels about Europe". In Vandebosch, Dagmar; D'haen, Theo (eds.). Literary Transnationalism(s). Brill. pp. 145–157. ISBN978-90-04-37086-9.