Emma Darwin (novelist)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Emma Darwin
Born8 April 1964
Genrehistorical fiction
Notable worksThe Mathematics of Love (2006)
A Secret Alchemy (2008)

Emma L. Darwin (born 8 April 1964

short stories. She is the great-great-granddaughter of Charles and Emma Darwin
.

Biography

Darwin was born and brought up in London. Her father was

John Traill Christie. Darwin has two sisters; Carola and Sophia. Due to the parents' work, the family spent three years commuting between London and Brussels. The family spent many holidays on the Essex/Suffolk border, where much of her novel The Mathematics of Love is set. Darwin has lamented that any reviews of her work inevitably include references to her family background.[2][3]

She read Drama at the

Goldsmiths' College
in 2010, where her supervisor was Maura Dooley. Darwin now lives with her children in South East London.

The Mathematics of Love was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers Best First Book Award for the Europe and South Asia region.[4]

In 2006, her short story Maura's Arm as awarded 3rd place in the

Bridport Prize. Previously her story, Closing Time had been longlisted for the 2005 Bridport Prize. She also was highly commended for Nunc Dimittis in the Cadenza Magazine Competition March 2005. Her short story Russian Tea was 2004 Phillip Good Memorial Prize
Runner Up, and was included in the 2006 Fish Short Histories Prize anthology.

Publications

References

  1. ^ Burke's Landed Gentry: Darwin, formerly of Downe
  2. ^ Emma Darwin (18 March 2007). "Emma Darwin may not be famous, but she's already a household name". The Daily Telegraph.
  3. ^ Emma Darwin (19 December 2007). "The Ancestral Elephant". This Itch of Writing:Writing, reading writing, teaching writing and sometimes hating writing: a blog by novelist Emma Darwin.
  4. ^ Commonwealth Writers Award Shortlist Archived 30 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine

External links