Sheridan Keith | |
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Born | 1942 (age 79–80) Wellington, New Zealand |
Occupation |
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Nationality | New Zealander |
Notable works | Zoology (1995) |
Sheridan Keith (born 1942) is a New Zealand author, artist, broadcaster and curator.
Keith was born in Wellington in 1942. [1] [2] She is the daughter of ceramic artist and painter June Black. [3] She studied zoology and English literature at Victoria University of Wellington. [4] During the 1960s she spent a decade living in London, and returned to New Zealand in 1974, where she worked as a journalist for several years before beginning to write fiction. [1]
Her work has included broadcasting, journalism and teaching creative writing, and her writing has been published in The London Magazine , Landfall, the New Zealand Listener and other magazines. [4] Her first collection of short stories, Shallow are the Smiles at the Supermarket (1991) was shortlisted in the Best First Book category of the Commonwealth Writers Prize. [4] Her first novel, Zoology (1995), grew out of a short story included in her second collection of short stories, Animal Passions (1992). [1] It won the Fiction Award at the 1996 Montana Book Awards. [4] [5]
Since around 1995, Keith has owned a gallery called Blikfang Art and Antiques in Northcote, a suburb of Auckland. [4] [3] [6]
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