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Christine Piper | |
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Born | 1979 Seoul, South Korea |
Occupation | Writer and editor |
Nationality | Australian |
Education | Doctor of Creative Arts |
Genre | Literary Fiction |
Website | |
www |
Christine Piper is an Australian author and editor. Her first novel, After Darkness, won the 2014 The Australian/Vogel Literary Award and was shortlisted for the 2015 Miles Franklin Literary Award. She won the 2014 Calibre Prize for an Outstanding Essay for "Unearthing the Past".
Christine Piper was born in Seoul, South Korea in 1979, to an Australian father and a Japanese mother. [1] Her family lived in Seoul for a year due to her father's work (her sister was born in Tokyo). She moved to Australia when she was one, and was raised and educated in Sydney. She has lived in Japan several times, teaching English and studying Japanese, most recently in 2010. She has also lived in the US for an extended period; the first of her two children was born in New York.
Piper attended Cheltenham Girls High School where she excelled at English and Visual Arts. She placed seventh in NSW in her final exams for the 1997 Higher School Certificate in Visual Arts. She went on to study a Bachelor of Media majoring in Print Media and Cultural Studies at Macquarie University where she attained a 3.8 GPA in her final year. While at university, Piper was an editorial assistant for Sydney's Child Magazine, a film columnist for Voiceworks Magazine and a features editor for Silverlimbo Magazine. After graduating, she worked as a magazine copy editor and a freelance writer. She then studied Bachelors of Communications (Creative Writing/Cultural Studies) at the University of Technology, Sydney achieving First Class Honours, and later creative writing at the Iowa Writers' Workshop and again at the University of Technology, Sydney, where she wrote After Darkness for her Doctor of Creative Arts degree. [1] After Darkness won the 2014 Vogel's Literary Award for manuscripts by writers under the age of 35, and was shortlisted for the 2015 Miles Franklin Literary Award. [2]
She won the 2014 Calibre Prize for an Outstanding Essay for "Unearthing the Past", [3] which she also wrote for her Doctor of Creative Arts degree.
She received a 2017 Australia Council individual artist grant [4] and was the 2019 Copyright Agency's New Writer's Fellow at the University of Technology, Sydney. [5]
She is currently working on her second novel, about two Australians and a pair of Queensland lungfish who journey to the Chicago World's Fair of 1933.
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