Charlotte Grimshaw
Encyclopedia

Career

Grimshaw's first book, Provocation (1999), drew on her experience as a criminal lawyer.

Her second book, Guilt (2000), followed the lives of four characters in Auckland in 1987.

Her third novel, Foreign City (2005) is the story of a young New Zealand painter living in London
London
London is the capital city of :England and the :United Kingdom, the largest metropolitan area in the United Kingdom, and the largest urban zone in the European Union by most measures. Located on the River Thames, London has been a major settlement for two millennia, its history going back to its...

.

Grimshaw’s collection of short stories Opportunity was published in 2007. Opportunity is a series of stories that can be read separately, but contribute to a unified whole. The author says it is ‘a novel with a large cast of characters...each story stands by itself, and at the same time adds to the larger one.'

Her latest book, Singularity, a companion volume to Opportunity, was published in 2009 by Random House New Zealand and by Jonathan Cape in the UK.

Grimshaw has also contributed to the following anthologies: Myth of the 21st Century (Reed 2006); The Best New Zealand Fiction Volumes Two, Three, Four and Five (Vintage); The New Zealand Book of the Beach Volumes One and Two (David Ling); Some Other Country (VUP); Second Violins (Vintage, 2008).

Prizes and awards

Grimshaw was awarded a Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship in 2000.

She has been a double finalist and prize winner in the Sunday Star-Times short story competition.

In 2006 she was awarded the Bank of New Zealand
Bank of New Zealand
Bank of New Zealand is one of New Zealand’s largest banks and has been operating continuously in the country since the first office was opened in Auckland in October 1861 followed shortly after by the first branch in Dunedin in December 1861...

 Katherine Mansfield Award for her short story ‘Plane Sailing’.

In 2007 she won a place in the Book Council’s Six Pack Prize for her short story, "The Yard Broom", which was published in The Six Pack Volume Two.

In 2007, Opportunity was short-listed for the world’s richest short fiction prize, the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award
Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award
The Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award is a literary award for short story collections. At 35,000 euro for the best book of short stories it claims to be the world's largest prize for a short story collection. Each year, roughly sixty books are longlisted, with either four or six books...

, following this with another shortlist nomination for Singularity in 2009.

In 2007 she was short listed for the prize of Montana River Reviewer of the Year. In 2008 she was awarded the Fiction award and the Montana medal for Fiction or Poetry at the Montana Book Awards for Opportunity. She was awarded the 2008 Montana prize for Reviewer of the Year in recognition of her fiction reviews in The New Zealand Listener.

Partial bibliography

Novels
  • Provocation. London: Little Brown, 1999.
  • Guilt. London: Abacus, 2000.
  • Foreign City. Auckland: Vintage, 2005.
  • Singularity. London: Jonathan Cape, 2009.

Short Stories
  • "Animals." Listener 3426.202 Jan (2006): 28-32.
  • "Gratitude." Sunday Star Times C Dec (2005): 4-5.
  • "The Storm." Listener April (2004): 44-46.

Short Story Collections
  • Essential New Zealand Short Stories. Auckland, Random House, 2009.
  • The Best New Zealand Fiction. Volume 5. Auckland, Vintage, 2008.
  • The Best New Zealand Fiction. Volume 4. Auckland: Vintage, 2007.
  • The New Zealand Book of the Beach. Auckland: David Ling Publishing, 2007.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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