Giles Foden (born in Warwickshire in 1967) is an English author best known for his award-winning novel The Last King of Scotland (1998).
His first novel, the acclaimed The Last King of Scotland (1998), is set during Idi Amin's rule of Uganda in the 1970s. It won the Whitbread First Novel Award, a Somerset Maugham Award, a Betty Trask Award and the Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize. The 2006 feature film, The Last King of Scotland starring Forest Whitaker, is based on Foden's novel with considerable differences, and Foden himself makes a brief cameo as a journalist at one of Amin's press conferences. His second novel, Ladysmith (1999), is set during the Anglo-Boer War in 1899 and tells the story of a young woman, Bella Kiernan, who becomes caught up in the Siege of Ladysmith. The book was inspired by letters written by Foden's great-grandfather, Arthur Foden, a British soldier in the Imperial Yeomanry in South Africa during the conflict.
Giles Foden edited The Guardian Century (1999), a collection of the best reportage and feature-writing published in the newspaper during the twentieth century, and he contributed a short story to The Weekenders, a collection of short fiction set in Africa by various contemporary writers. Zanzibar (2002), is set in East Africa and explores the events surrounding the bombings of American embassies in 1998. His latest book, Mimi and Toutou Go Forth: The Bizarre Battle for Lake Tanganyika, was published in 2004. (Source: Contemporary Writers in the UK)