Joan Brady (American-British writer)

Joan Brady Masters
Born Joan Brady
(1939-12-04) December 4, 1939
San Francisco, California, United States
Pen name Joan Brady
Occupation Writer
Language English
Nationality United States
Citizenship British
Period 1979-Present
Genre Biography, suspense fiction
Notable works Theory of War
Spouse Dexter Masters (1909-1989)
Children Alexander Masters (son)
Relatives Mildred Edie Brady (mother), Robert A. Brady (father)
Website
www.joanbrady.co.uk

Joan Brady (born 4 December 1939 in San Francisco, California) is an American-British writer. She is the first woman and American to win the Whitbread Book of the Year Award for her novel Theory of War.

Biography

Personal life

Born Joan Brady on December 4, 1939 in San Francisco, California to Mildred Edie Brady and Robert A. Brady. She has one sister, Judy.[1] Before becoming an author, she was a dancer with the San Francisco Ballet and the New York City Ballet then went on to study philosophy at Columbia University in New York. In 1963, she married author Dexter Masters, her mother's former secret lover.[2] In 1965 they moved to England, and together had a son, Alexander Masters, who authored Stuart: A Life Backwards.[1] Her husband died in 1989, and she currently lives in Oxford, England.[3]

Works

Her first published book was The Impostor in 1979. In 1982, she published her autobiography, that appears under both the titles The Unmaking of a Dancer and Prologue: An Unconventional Life'.

Her third book and second novel, Theory of War, was hailed as a "modern work of genius" and earned the Whitbread Novel of the Year award, as well as the Whitbread Book of the Year award.[4][5] This book also won the French Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger and a US National Endowment for the Arts grant. It tells the story of her grandfather, a white child sold as a slave right after the Civil War when the Emancipation Proclamation meant that African Americans could no longer be sold, and so many soldiers had died in the war that there were thousands of orphans. The psychological consequences of such a background—for the slave himself and for the generations that followed him—are the main concern of the novel. Two novels followed, Death Comes for Peter Pan, an expose of medical abuse in America, and The Emigre, the adventures of a conman.

Bleedout is her first thriller. She started writing crime fiction during a legal battle over fumes from a nearby shoemaker during which her local Council threatened her with prison.[6] She won a large settlement from the shoe factory, but this personal experience of perceived political injustice and corruption shocked her into seeking a way to expose it. Bleedout takes place against a backdrop of just such political and corporate corruption—but on a national scale—and follows two men, one a murderer, another his mentor in the process of being murdered as the action progresses. Its sequel Venom, published in 2010, introduces the theme of pharmaceutical ruthlessness in pursuit of a cure for radiation poisoning.

Bibliography

References

External links

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