Shena Mackay

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Shena Mackay

Scottish Arts Council Book Award

Shena Mackay

Orange Prize for Fiction in 2003 for Heligoland
.

Biography

Early years

Mackay was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1944. After the Second World War, her family moved to Hampstead, London, and eventually settled in Shoreham, Kent, from where she attended Tonbridge Grammar School. Her writing career started with her winning a poetry competition in the Daily Mirror at the age of 16, while still at school.[1] After leaving school, she began working in an office, before getting a job at an antique shop in Chancery Lane. The antique shop was owned by the parents of art critic David Sylvester, with whom Mackay had her daughter Cecily.[2]

Writing

Mackay's first publication, in 1964, was a volume of two novellas, Dust Falls on Eugene Schlumburger and Toddler on the Run.[3]

In 1965, she published her first novel, Music Upstairs, set in London in the early 1960s.[4]

She won the

Scottish Arts Council Book Award for her 1991 novel, Dunedin.[3]

Her novel

Booker Prize for Fiction.[5][4] Characterised by Publishers Weekly as "finely wrought and touching",[6] the novel is set in the 1950s and focuses on April, an eight-year-old girl from Streatham who is forced to move to Kent when her parents decide to run a tearoom.[7]

Mackay's 2003 novel,

Orange Prize for Fiction.[8][9] Peter Bradshaw commented on her "consistently beautiful writing"[10] and a review in The Times called the novel "an exceptional performance".[11]

Mackay has been described as "a skilled observer of the British class system and its discontents",[12] receiving praise for her short stories as well as her novels.[13] A review of her 2015 Dancing on the Outskirts observed that she is "a master of subtle irony, and ... the comedy of unexpected juxtapositions and her skewering perception",[14] while Allan Massie in The Scotsman said: "Shena Mackay writes wonderful short stories, wonderful in that they are full of wonder, and wonderful too in the everyday sense of the word. She has the knack of taking the ordinary and making it extraordinary. She is good on loneliness and pain, but also on the moments of beauty and kindness which shine a sudden light on desolate lives. This selection is the ripe harvested fruit of more than 30 years of writing short stories. There are half a dozen at least that a duller writer might have made a novel of. She is a comic writer, but one who might also say, 'And if I laugh at anything, / 'tis that I may not weep'."[15] Michèle Roberts noted: "Shena Mackay's work has glittered from the start. ...This new collection of short stories (some drawn from previous publications) showcases her genius for building comedy from terseness and compression. ...A triumph!"[16]

Mackay was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1999,[17] and was also appointed Honorary Visiting Professor at Middlesex University.[18]

Personal life

In an interview with

synaesthetic and "sees words as colours", her own name being yellow.[19]

She married Robin Brown in 1966 and they brought up her three daughters, Sarah Clark, Rebecca Smith and painter Cecily Brown. Her daughter Cecily was not told that Sylvester was her father until she was an adult. Mackay and Brown later divorced and she moved back to London.[2] As of 2008, Mackay lives in Southampton.[2] She is in favour of an independent Scotland.[20]

Works

Novels

Short story collections

  • Dust Falls on Eugene Schlumburger/Toddler on the Run (1964)
  • Babies in Rhinestones (1983)
  • Dreams of Dead Women's Handbags (1987)
  • The Laughing Academy (1993)
  • Collected Short Stories (1994)
  • The World's Smallest Unicorn (1999)
  • The Atmospheric Railway (2008)
  • Dancing on the Outskirts (2015)

As editor

  • Friendship: An Anthology (1997)

Awards and nominations

Notes

  1. ^ Hamilton, Ian (10 July 1999). "Bohemian rhapsodist". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  2. ^ a b c Cooke, Rachel (9 November 2008). "Interview | 'It all began with Freud and Bacon...'". The Observer. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  3. ^ a b Weber, Katharine (18 December 1994). "Living on Vodka and Asparagus". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Shena Mackay – Literature". literature.britishcouncil.org. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  5. ^ "The Orchard on Fire". The Booker Prizes. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  6. ^ "The Orchard on Fire". Publishers Weekly. 11 April 1996. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  7. ^ Myerson, Julie (9 June 1996). "In hot water at the Copper Kettle". The Independent. London. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  8. ^ Ezard, John (13 November 2003). "Curious incident of writer's literary hat trick". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  9. ^ "Heligoland". Women's Prize for Fiction. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  10. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (1 March 2003). "Muddling through". The Guardian.
  11. ^ Baker, Phil (14 December 2003). "Heligoland by Shena Mackay". The Times.
  12. ^ Smith, Jules (2008), "Shena Mackay | Critical perspective", Literature, British Council.
  13. ^ Adams, Matthew (27 November 2015). "Dancing on the outskirts by Shena Mackay, review: 'a delicate marriage of beauty and pain'". The Telegraph.
  14. ^ White, Melanie (6 December 2015). "Shena Mackay, Dancing on the Outskirts: 'Life beyond the fringe', book review". Independent on Sunday.
  15. ^ Massie, Allan (5 December 2015). "Book review: Dancing on the Outskirts by Shena Mackay | SHENA Mackay's ability to reveal whole lives in just a few pages makes her one of the finest short story writers of our time". The Scotsman.
  16. ^ Roberts, Michèle (19 November 2019). "Dancing on the Outskirts by Shena Mackay, book review". The Independent.
  17. ^ "Shena Mackay". The Royal Society of Literature. Archived from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  18. ^ Leatherbarrow, Linda. "Sunsets and Suburbia". Slightly Foxed (26). Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  19. ^ Brown, Helen (4 January 2004). "A writer's life: Shena Mackay". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  20. ^ Luyken, Reiner (19 October 2011). "Wo jeder Brite als Verräter gilt". Die Zeit (in German). Zeit-online. Retrieved 3 January 2012.

References

External links