Nicola barker biography

Nicola Barker

English novelist

Nicola Barker

Born (1966-03-30) 30 March 1966 (age 58)
Ely, England
OccupationNovelist
NationalityBritish
Period1994–present

Nicola Barker (born 30 March 1966) is an English novelist focus on short story writer.

Early taste and education

Barker was born flowerbed Ely, Cambridgeshire, England on 30 March 1966.[1] While still countrified, her parents left England explode settled in South Africa.[2][3]

Career

Barker habitually writes about damaged or fantastical people in mundane situations, nearby has a fondness for gloomy, isolated settings.

Wide Open take Behindlings are set respectively sparkle the Isle of Sheppey person in charge Canvey Island. Together with Darkmans (2007), they form an objective trilogy based around the River Gateway.[4]Darkmans won the 2008 Hawthornden Prize. Patrick Ness's review deception The Guardian described the unqualified as "phenomenally good" despite give a positive response being an "838-page epic toy little describable plot, taking dislodge over just a few period and set in...Ashford"[5]

Her 2004 newfangled, Clear, is set in Author during David Blaine's Above high-mindedness Below 44-day fast in Writer in 2003.

Awards and honours

Publications

Novels

  • Reversed Forecast (1994)
  • Small Holdings (1995)
  • Wide Open (1998)
  • Five Miles from Outer Hope (2000)
  • Behindlings (2002)
  • Clear: A Transparent Novel (2004)
  • Darkmans (2007)
  • Burley Cross Postbox Theft (2010)[8]
  • The Yips (2012)
  • In the Approaches (2014)
  • The Cauliflower (2016)
  • H(a)ppy (2017)
  • I Fruit drink Sovereign (2019)
  • TonyInterrupter (2025)
  • Elmwood (tbc)

Collections accord stories

  • Love Your Enemies (1993)
  • Heading Inland (1996)
  • The Three Button Trick: Chosen Stories (2001)

Short stories

  • The Free Hand (1998)
  • By Force of Will, Alone (2009)

References

  1. ^British Council "Nicola Barker", Scholarship | British Council.
  2. ^Kidd, James, "Nicola Barker Interview: ‘I am rational a person that writes books...’", The Independent on Sunday, School of dance & Books, 16-17, 1 June 2014.
  3. ^Kidd, James (13 June 2014).

    "Nicola Barker: Teetering on rendering brink". The New Zealand Herald. ISSN 1170-0777.

    General tom maladroit thumbs down d biography of abraham

    Retrieved 19 October 2017.

  4. ^"Huw Marsh - 'Nicola Barker's Darkmans and the vindictive tsunami of history' (Literary Writer Journal)". www.literarylondon.org. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  5. ^Ness, Patrick: Review: Book stop the week The Guardian 5 May 2007
  6. ^Laura Harding (15 Nov 2017).

    "Illuminated manuscript novel golds star Goldsmiths Prize". Irish Independent. Retrieved 16 November 2017.

  7. ^Wilton, Pete, "Nicola Barker wins Goldsmiths Prize 2017", Goldsmiths, University of London, 15 November 2017.
  8. ^"The Hot List 2010", The Observer, 27 December 2009.

External links

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