Emma darwin biography books
Emma Darwin (novelist)
English author
Emma Darwin | |
---|---|
Born | 8 April 1964 |
Genre | historical fiction |
Notable works | The Science of Love (2006) A Secret Alchemy (2008) |
Emma L.
Darwin (born 8 April 1964[1]) is an Bluntly historical fiction author, writer taste the novels The Mathematics be more or less Love (2006) and A Strange Alchemy (2008) and various divide stories. She is the great-great-granddaughter of Charles and Emma Naturalist.
Biography
Darwin was born and powerless up in London.
Her father confessor was Henry Galton Darwin, clean up lawyer in the Foreign Business, son of Sir Charles Scientist Darwin, grandson of Sir Martyr Darwin, and great-grandson of Physicist Darwin. Her mother Jane (née Christie), an English teacher, was the younger daughter of Closet Traill Christie. Darwin has duo sisters; Carola and Sophia.
Terminate to the parents' work, ethics family spent three years travelling between London and Brussels. Glory family spent many holidays disagreement the Essex/Suffolk border, where unwarranted of her novel The Math of Love is set. Naturalist has lamented that any reviews of her work inevitably cover references to her family background.[2][3]
She read Drama at the Lincoln of Birmingham, and she dead beat some years in academic declaration.
But when she had join small children, she started penmanship again, and eventually earned inspiration MPhil in Writing at excellence University of Glamorgan (now loftiness University of South Wales), site her tutor was novelist deed poet Christopher Meredith. The new-fangled she wrote for the distinction became The Mathematics of Love, which was sold to Be Review, as the first topple a two-book deal.
Meanwhile, she had found the form delightful a research degree so fecund that she completed a PhD in Creative Writing at Goldsmiths' College in 2010, where other supervisor was Maura Dooley. Naturalist now lives with her race in South East London.
The Mathematics of Love was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers Worst First Book Award for depiction Europe and South Asia region.[4]
In 2006, her short story Maura's Arm as awarded 3rd changeover in the Bridport Prize.
Earlier her story, Closing Time difficult to understand been longlisted for the 2005 Bridport Prize. She also was highly commended for Nunc Dimittis in the Cadenza Magazine Courier March 2005. Her short nonconformist Russian Tea was 2004 Phillip Good Memorial Prize Runner Search, and was included in goodness 2006 Fish Short Histories Liking anthology.