Serena Mackesy

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Serena Mackesy (pen name, Alex Marwood; born c. 1960s) is a British novelist and journalist who lives in London.

Life and education

Serena Mackesy is the daughter of the Scots-born

Manchester College, Oxford.[1]

Mackesy worked variously in offices, as an English teacher and on door-to-door sales before, as she told an interviewer in 2000: "I arrived at The Independent as a temp to cover for the secretary on the TV listings page... for a couple of weeks, realised I'd found somewhere I enjoyed and somehow never left.... I think the first writing I did was little potted movie previews on the weekend TV spread. The first thing anyone seemed to actually notice was a small daily bar review I used to write when the paper had a London supplement."[2] By 1997 she was a regular columnist.[3]

As a child, Serena Mackesy was a keen rider. She has described Malta as her favourite place in the world.[1]

Novels

Mackesy established her reputation with the novel The Temp (1999).[4] This went into the Sunday Times Top Ten on publication.[5] Since then, she has published Virtue (2000),[6] Simply Heaven (2002),[7] and Hold My Hand (2008).[8]

In 2012, she adopted the pseudonym "Alex Marwood" with the publication of the psychological thriller The Wicked Girls. This became a word-of-mouth bestseller in the UK, and was translated into 17 languages. It was included in Stephen King's Entertainment Weekly list of "The Ten Best Books I read this year" in 2013 and was shortlisted for an ITW award in the same year. The book won the Edgar Allan Poe Award (best paperback original) in 2014 and is also shortlisted for the Macavity Awards and Anthony Awards in the United States. A follow-up, The Killer Next Door, was published in 2014 followed, in 2016, by The Darkest Secret.[9]

Work of Mackesy's has been translated into 19 languages. Writers she admires include Kurt Vonnegut, C. S. Lewis (Narnia series), John Donne and the "other" Elizabeth Taylor (Angel).[1]

Awards and recognition

References

  1. ^ a b c Author site: Retrieved 2 April 2011. Archived 27 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Authortrek interview: Retrieved 2 April 2011. Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ The Independent website. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  4. ISBN 0-7126-8079-9. Bibliographical details from British Library Integrated Catalogue Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  5. ^ Publisher's website. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
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  9. ^ "Alex Marwood" website