Gwendoline Riley
Gwendoline Riley is an English writer, born in 1979. Born in London, she attended Manchester Metropolitan University. Her first book, Cold Water, was named one of the five outstanding debut novels of 2002 by The Guardian 'Weekend' magazine and also won a Betty Trask Award. Sick Notes followed in 2004 and Joshua Spassky in 2007. For Cold Water and Sick Notes, the drama unfolds in Manchester, occasionally extending to different areas of Lancashire. Joshua Spassky, however, is set in Asheville, North Carolina - the town where Zelda Fitzgerald died in a fire at the Highland Hospital. Joshua Spassky won the 2008 Somerset Maugham Award and was shortlisted for the 2007John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. Riley was also a recipient of the Robert Louis Stevenson Fellowship in 2011.
Her fourth novel, Opposed Positions, was published in May 2012. Her fifth, First Love, will be published in 2017.[1]
She is married to the poet Alan Jenkins.
Bibliography
- Cold Water (novel) (2002)
- Sick Notes (2004)
- Tuesday Nights and Wednesday Mornings: A Novella and Stories (2004)
- Joshua Spassky (2007)
- Opposed Positions (2012)
References
External links
- 'Dotpod' podcast interview from run-riot.com
- Guardian interview (2007)
- 3:AM Magazine interview (2004)
- Times Literary Supplement review of Joshua Spassky, by Paul Owen
- Guardian review of Opposed Positions, by Anne Enright
- Scotsman review of Opposed Positions, by Stuart Kelly