Sarah Perry

Sarah Perry
Born (1979-11-28) 28 November 1979
Chelmsford, England
Occupation Writer
Alma mater Royal Holloway University
Period 2003 - present

Sarah Grace Perry (née Butler) is an English author, academic, and journalist. She was born in 1979 in Chelmsford, Essex. She has a PhD in creative writing from Royal Holloway University where her supervisor was Sir Andrew Motion. Her first novel, After Me Comes the Flood, was published in 2014 by Serpent's Tail.[1]

Early life

Born into a family of devout Christians who were members of a Strict Baptist chapel, Perry grew up with almost no access to contemporary art, culture, and writing. The first novel she remembers reading was Jane Eyre, and she filled her time with classical music, classic novels and poetry, and church-related activities. She credits her writing style to having only the Bible and classical writings to which to refer.[2]

Academic career

Her PhD thesis was on the Gothic in the writing of Iris Murdoch, and she has subsequently published an article on the Gothic in Aeon magazine.[3][4]

I wrote about the power of place in my PhD thesis, particularly the importance of buildings in the Gothic (a genre which I find myself inhabiting without ever having meant to). Fiction in the Gothic inheritance makes much of the potent importance of the interior, from the castle where Jonathan Harker finds himself holed up to Thornfield, and from the suburban homes in Hilary Mantel’s Beyond Black to the ghastly crypts in The Monk.

In January 2013 she became writer in residence at Gladstone's Library.[5]

Her website states that her current research includes friendship, Tennyson, Essex legends & late 19th century surgical science.[6]

Journalism

Perry continues to work as a legal journalist. She also writes on the arts, and her articles on both subjects have appeared in a number of publications including The Spectator, The Guardian, and The Oldie.[7]

Novel

Perry's debut novel, After Me Comes the Flood, was released in 2014 by Serpent's Tail, receiving high praise from reviewers including those of The Daily Telegraph and The Guardian.[8] The novel tells the story of a man named John Cole who wanders into a strange world while seeking out his brother amidst a drought. John Burnside of The Guardian called it "extraordinary" and "a remarkable debut." [9]

Awards

Perry won the Shiva Naipaul prize for travel writing after writing an article about her experiences in the Philippines.[10] [7]

References

External links

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