Cal Flyn is a Scottish author and journalist. [1]
Flyn was born in Inverness, Scotland. She attended Charleston Academy, a state secondary school. [2] As a child, she underwent orthopedic surgery to correct proximal femoral focal deficiency affecting the left leg. [3]
Flyn holds an MA in experimental psychology from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, and a NCTJ certificate in newspaper journalism from Lambeth College. [4] [5]
After graduation, Flyn worked as a reporter for The Sunday Times and The Daily Telegraph . [2] She left her job in 2012 to work at a dog-sledding kennels in Finnish Lapland. [6] Flyn is the deputy editor of the literary recommendations website Five Books [7]
She was made a MacDowell fellow in 2019. [8] In 2022, she was declared 'Young Writer of the Year' by The Sunday Times. [9]
She is the author of nonfiction books Islands of Abandonment: Life in the Post-Human Landscape (2022) [10] and Thicker Than Water: History, Secrets, and Guilt (2016), [11] and has published essays and articles in Granta , The Guardian , The Wall Street Journal , The Sunday Times Magazine , and other publications. [12] [13] [14]
Her first book, Thicker Than Water, tells the story of a distant relative, Angus McMillan, who is believed to have been one of the ringleaders of the Gippsland massacres of Gunaikurnai aboriginal people. [15] [16] [17] Her second book, Islands of Abandonment, is an exploration of places where nature is reclaiming lands once occupied by humans, such as Plymouth, Montserrat, and Chernobyl. [18] [19]
Islands of Abandonment won the John Burroughs Medal for natural history writing. [20] It was also shortlisted for the 2021 Wainwright Prize for writing on global conservation, [21] the 2021 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, the Royal Society of Literature's Ondaatje Prize [22] and the British Academy Book Prize, [23] among others.
Flyn's third book The Savage Landscape is planned for publication in 2025. [24]
Flyn lives in the Orkney Islands. [25]
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