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Australian novelist, writer and academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Debra Adelaide (born 1958) is an Australian novelist, writer and academic.[1] She teaches creative writing at the University of Technology Sydney.
Debra Adelaide | |
---|---|
Born | 1958 (age 65–66) Sydney, New South Wales |
Occupation | Novelist |
Language | English |
Nationality | Australian |
Years active | 1988- |
Adelaide was born in Sydney and grew up in the Sutherland Shire.[2] A contemporary of writers Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey, she attended Gymea High School and then, via a teacher's scholarship, she completed a BA (Honours) and MA (Honours) in English literature at the University of Sydney. She then completed a PhD in Australian women's literature in 1991 there,[3] and in the process completed her first book, a bibliography of Australian women's literature.
While studying, Debra Adelaide worked as a university tutor and research assistant, and afterwards became a freelance editor, author and book reviewer. She commenced writing fiction in the early 1990s and her first novel, The Hotel Albatross, was published in 1995.
She is currently an associate professor in creative practice at the University of Technology Sydney, where she teaches in the undergraduate communication program and teaches and supervises postgraduate creative writing.
She was married until 2003 and has three children.
Adelaide has published 12 books, including novels, anthologies and reference books on Australian literature. Her novels are The Household Guide to Dying (Picador:2008), The Hotel Albatross (Vintage: 1995) and Serpent Dust (Vintage: 1998). She has published two collections of short fiction, entitled Zebra: and other stories (Picador: 2019) and Letter to George Clooney (Picador: 2013) and also contributed to and edited the anthology Acts of Dogs (Vintage: 2003) in which leading Australian and NZ authors have written stories and memoirs on the theme of dogs, and the Motherlove series of anthologies (Random House: 1996; 1997; 1998).[4]
Zebra won the 2019 University of Southern Queensland Steele Rudd Award for a Short Story Collection.[5]
Year | Work | Prize | Category | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Letter to George Clooney | Nita Kibble Literary Awards | Nita B Kibble Literary Award | Shortlisted | [21] |
Stella Prize | — | Longlisted | [22] | ||
2016 | The Women's Pages | Nita Kibble Literary Awards | Nita B Kibble Literary Award | Lonlisted | |
Stella Prize | — | Longlisted | [23] | ||
2019 | Zebra | Queensland Literary Awards | Steele Rudd Award | Won | [5] |
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