Kirsten Miller | |
---|---|
Nationality | South African |
Alma mater | University of KwaZulu-Natal |
Occupation(s) | Novelist, writer and artist |
Website | www |
Kirsten Miller is a South African novelist, writer and artist with six full-length books published between 2006 and 2021.
Miller has a BA (Hons.) cum laude and an MA summa cum laude from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
Miller has held jobs as a university lecturer, creativity teacher and dolphin trainer and has lived in Gqeberha, London, Cape Town and Johannesburg.
Miller currently lives in Durban and runs the Kirsten Miller Creative Studio located within the grounds of the Phansi Museum. The studio provides courses and individual interaction in writing, art, literacy and development for neurodivergent and neurotypical people. [1]
Miller was formerly the founding director of the NGO Action in Autism, which provides support and resources for autistic children and adults and their families. The organization also lobbies government and civil society to improve quality of life for people with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). [2]
Her spare time is spent attending to her artwork and writing. [3]
Miller's first book, Children on the Bridge: A Story of Autism in South Africa, is an autobiographical account of her early work as a tutor of autistic children. It details her experiences working with these children and their families and the effect this work has on her personal life. [4] [5]
Her first novel, All is Fish, was shortlisted for the 2005 European Union Literary Awards. [6] The novel is set in the resort town of Mtunzini in Zululand, South Africa, and deals warmly with the complex relationships between the three central protagonists. [7] [8]
In 2014, the novel Sister Moon was published by Umuzi, Random House. Sister Moon is a story of love and growing up, of exclusion and abuse. [9] Two further novels The Hum of the Sun and All That is Left were published by NB Publishers, under their imprint Kwela Books, in 2018 and 2020 respectively. The Hum of the Sun has been translated into German for the Basel-based publisher Baobab Books. The novel was released in Europe in September 2021 under the title Hörst du, wie der Himmel singt?. [10]
Miller has published short stories in five collections and was also a three times finalist in the SA Pen Awards. [11] In 2012 her autism themed play "Remember Joe" was published in Short, Sharp and Snappy, a collection of plays by South African playwrights and authors. Miller was a featured book reviewer for the Sunday Times and has contributed regularly to South African Airways' in-flight magazine Sawubona until 2014. [12]
Miller has written an illustrated children's book titled A Time for Fairies, which was published in South Africa in 2008. [13]
Miller was featured in the 2008, 2015, 2018 and 2020 Time of the Writer International Writers Festivals alongside Breyten Breytenbach, Charles Mungoshi, Ananda Devi and John Pilger. [14] [15] Kirsten has been a participant in the Franschhoek Literary Festival, the Midlands Literary Festival and the Karoo Writer's Festival.
SABC TV featured Miller in the series The Power Within , aired in December 2009, where she discussed her work in autism, writing and art. She has made a number of TV and radio appearances where she has spoken about her writing and about her work in autism.
Miller works in mosaics, oils and watercolours, drawing inspiration from her surroundings and thoughts. She has completed commissions from the National Arts Council for large-scale mosaic pieces working with autistic people. [16] Johannesburg's Unity Gallery held solo exhibitions of her work in 2005 and 2012. [17] [18]
In 2023, Miller was commissioned to create a memorial bench in the Durban Botanic Gardens to commemorate organ donors. The bench was built with help from autistic adults from Action in Autism's Shahumna Centre. [19]
Her life-size fabric, beads and fiberglass commission of African Moo-nlight for CowParade was purchased on auction by the brewer SABMiller. [20]
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