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Jem Poster (born 1949) is a contemporary British poet and novelist, born in Cambridge, England. He has worked variously as an archaeologist for English Heritage, as lecturer in English Literature with Oxford University Department for Continuing Education, as Chair of Creative Writing at Aberystwyth University and as advisor and tutor for Cambridge University’s MSt in Creative Writing. He is a former fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford and former chair of the editorial board of New Welsh Review.
Poster first attracted notice as a poet, and his debut collection, Brought to Light, was published in 2001. A year later his first novel appeared: Courting Shadows is a historical novel with dark gothic undertones, a first-person account of a young architect’s visit to a remote rural village, and of the damage he inflicts both on the community and on the fabric of its church. The book was widely and positively reviewed, with Julie Myerson, describing it in the Guardian as ‘highly, bewitchingly readable … a fantastically tightly written, read-every-word novel’, [1] and Jane Jakeman, writing in the Independent, noted that it was ‘beautifully written, full of precision and intensity.’ [2]
Poster’s second novel, Rifling Paradise, was published in 2006. It follows the fortunes of Charles Redbourne, a minor nineteenth-century landowner who goes out to New South Wales in the hope of making his name as a collector of scientific specimens and finds himself forced by terrifying circumstances into a radical reappraisal of his life and his relationship to the natural world. Jonathan Bate in the Guardian described the novel as ‘stylish, assured and thoughtful’ [3] while the Mail on Sunday’s reviewer described it as ‘a terrifying journey into the dark recesses of the human soul’, adding that its ‘evocation of the native [Australian] flora and fauna is inspiring.’
Poster’s environmental and cultural concerns have been widely discussed, most notably in Mariadele Boccardi’s ‘The Naturalist in the Garden of Eden: Science and Colonial Landscape in Jem Poster's Rifling Paradise’, published in Victoriographies vol. 6, no. 2, June 2016 (Edinburgh University Press). [4]
The Garden of Eden, also called the Terrestrial Paradise, or simply Paradise, is the biblical "Garden of God" described in the Book of Genesis and the Book of Ezekiel. Genesis 13:10 refers to the "garden of God", and the "trees of the garden" are mentioned in Ezekiel 31:9. The Book of Zechariah and the Book of Psalms also refer to trees and water, without explicitly mentioning Eden.
Sir Philip Pullman, CBE, FRSL is an English author of high-selling books, including the fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials and a fictionalised biography of Jesus, The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ. In 2008, The Times named Pullman one of the "50 greatest British writers since 1945". In a 2004 BBC poll, he was named the eleventh most influential person in British culture. He was knighted in the 2019 New Year Honours for services to literature.
Julie Myerson is an English author and critic. As well as writing fiction and non-fiction books, she wrote a long-running column in The Guardian entitled "Living with Teenagers", based on her own family experiences. She also appeared regularly as a panellist on the arts programme Newsnight Review.
Andrew Brooke Miller FRSL is an English novelist.
Jane Porter was an English historical novelist, dramatist and literary figure. Her work The Scottish Chiefs is seen as one of the earliest historical novels and remains popular among children in Scotland.
Roy Aubrey Kelvin Heath was a Guyanese writer who settled in the UK, where he lived for five decades, working as a schoolteacher as well as writing. His 1978 novel The Murderer won the Guardian Fiction Prize. He went on to become more noted for his "Georgetown Trilogy" of novels, consisting of From the Heat of the Day (1979), One Generation (1980), and Genetha (1981). Heath said that his writing was "intended to be a dramatic chronicle of twentieth-century Guyana". His work has been described as "marked by comprehensive social observation, penetrating psychological analysis, and vigorous, picaresque action."
If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things is British writer Jon McGregor's first novel, which was first published by Bloomsbury in 2002. It portrays a day in the life of a suburban British street, with the plot alternately following the lives of the street's various inhabitants. All but one person's viewpoint is described in the third person, and the narrative uses a flowing grammatical style which mimics their thought processes.
Shahriar Mandanipour (Persian: شهریار مندنی پور; also Shahriar Mondanipour , Shiraz, Iran, is an Iranian writer, journalist and literary theorist.
Dorothy Enid Eden was a New Zealand novelist and short story writer, principally in the Gothic genre.
Jonathan Myerson is a British dramatist and novelist, writing principally for television and radio. His partner is novelist Julie Myerson.
Stephan Collishaw is an author from Nottinghamshire.
David Rains Wallace is an American writer who has published more than twenty books on conservation and natural history, including The Monkey's Bridge and The Klamath Knot. He has written articles for the National Geographic Society, The Nature Conservancy, the Sierra Club, and other groups. Wallace's work also has appeared in Harper's Magazine, The New York Times, Sierra, Wilderness and other periodicals.
Jenn Ashworth is an English writer born in 1982 in Preston, Lancashire. In June 2018 Ashworth was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in its "40 Under 40" initiative.
Henry Edward Sutton is an award-winning crime novelist. The author of nine works of fiction including My Criminal World (2013) and Get Me Out of Here (2011), he teaches Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, where he is a Senior Lecturer and the co-director of the Master of Arts in Prose Fiction UEA Creative Writing Course. In 2004, he won the J.B.Priestley Award.
Tessa Jane Hadley is a British author of novels, short stories and non-fiction. Her writing is realistic and often focuses on family relationships. Her novels have twice reached the longlists of the Orange Prize and the Wales Book of the Year, and in 2016, she won the Hawthornden Prize, as well as one of the Windham-Campbell Literature Prizes for fiction. The Windham-Campbell judges describe her as "one of English's finest contemporary writers" and state that her writing "brilliantly illuminates ordinary lives with extraordinary prose that is superbly controlled, psychologically acute, and subtly powerful." As of 2016, she is professor of creative writing at Bath Spa University.
S. E. Lister is an English historical fiction author. In 2015 she was nominated for the Edinburgh First Book Award for her debut novel Hideous Creatures.
Romanticism was an artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century. Scholars regard the publishing of William Wordsworth's and Samuel Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads in 1798 as probably the beginning of the movement, and the crowning of Queen Victoria in 1837 as its end. Romanticism arrived in other parts of the English-speaking world later; in America, it arrived around 1820.
Novuyo Rosa Tshuma is a Zimbabwean writer and professor of creative writing. She is the author of Shadows, a novella and House of Stone, a novel.
The Little Red Chairs is a 2015 novel by Irish author Edna O'Brien, who was 85 at the time of publication. The novel is O'Brien's 23rd fictional publication.
Artful is a 2012 novel by Scottish author Ali Smith and published by Penguin Books. It was shortlisted for the inaugural Goldsmiths Prize (2013).
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