Melina Marchetta

Melina Marchetta
Born Melina Marchetta
(1965-03-25) 25 March 1965
Sydney
Occupation Writer
Nationality Australian
Period 1992–present
Genre Young adult fiction
Notable works
Notable awards CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers
Website
www.melinamarchetta.com.au

Melina Marchetta (born 25 March 1965) is an Australian writer and teacher. Melina is best known as the author of novels, Looking for Alibrandi, Saving Francesca and On the Jellicoe Road. She has twice been awarded the CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers, in 1993 and 2004. For Jellicoe Road she won the 2009 Michael L. Printz Award from the American Library Association, recognising the year's best book for young adults.[1] Marchetta holds a name for being one of the more prominent Australian Authors of present time in Young-Adult Fiction.[2]


Education and early work

Melina Marchetta was born in Sydney on 25 March 1965. She is of Italian middle child with two sisters. Marchetta attended high school at Rosebank College in the Sydney suburb of Five Dock. She left school at age fifteen as she was not confident in her academic ability. She then enrolled in a business school which helped her gain employment with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and later at a travel agency. This work gave her confidence to return to study and gain a teaching degree from the Australian Catholic University. She then got a job teaching at St Mary's Cathedral College, Sydney in the heart of the Sydney CBD until 2006. She now writes full-time.

Breakthrough: Looking for Alibrandi

Her first novel, Looking for Alibrandi was released in 1992 to much acclaim with a first print-run sellout within two months of its release. Published in 14 countries, including 11 translated editions, Looking for Alibrandi swept the pool of literary awards for young adult fiction in 1993 including the coveted CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers. Dubbed "the most stolen library book" the popular novel has sold more than half a million copies worldwide and was followed by her film adaptation of the same title released in 1999, Looking for Alibrandi.

Worldwide recognition: 2003–present

While writing the AFI award-winning screenplay Marchetta taught English, Italian and History full-time for ten years at a city high school for boys. During that time she released her second novel, Saving Francesca in 2003, followed by On the Jellicoe Road in 2006. Both novels have been published in more than 6 countries, with Saving Francesca translated into 4 languages. In its U.S. edition, Jellicoe Road won the 2009 Printz Award for "literary excellence in young adult literature".[1]

Marchetta's fourth novel, the fantasy epic Finnikin of the Rock, was released by Penguin Australia in October 2008. It has since won the 2008 Aurealis Award for best young-adult novel and the 2009 ABIA (Australian Booksellers Industry Awards) Book of the Year for Older Children, and was recently shortlisted for the 2009 CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers. In the USA Finnikin has received starred reviews from Publisher's Weekly, School Library Journal, Booklist and the Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books.

Marchetta has also written short stories including Twelve Minutes, part of the Books Alive anthology "10 Short Stories You Must Read This Year", along with reviews and opinion pieces for The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian and the Australian Literary Review. She has also been a writer-in-residence around the country, as far north as Thursday Island and as far south as Hobart.

Her fifth novel, The Piper's Son was released in Australia in 2010 and is an accompanying novel to Saving Francesca, but through the perspective of another character in the book.

Personal life

Melina Marchetta currently resides in Sydney,NSW, Australia. Marchetta makes frequent visits to schools to talk about her books. She also attends interviews, book signings, book club meetings at libraries and bookshops and gives talks to students about her novels. Marchetta has a blog on which she announces book updates, interviews and thoughts and anything in relation to writing and her novels.[3]

Awards and nominations

Screenplay

Marchetta wrote the screenplay for the film Looking for Alibrandi (1999), a film starring Pia Miranda, Greta Scacchi and Anthony La Paglia. The film received rave reviews and was a huge box office success, winning five awards including an AFI award and an Independent Film Award for best screenplay, as well as the NSW Premier's Literary Award and the Film Critics Circle of Australia Award.[7]

She is currently working on the screenplay of her novel On the Jellicoe Road. In interviews she has announced that she will be trying to keep the film as similar to events in the book. "I'm always irritated when I watch films that were based from books, but where whole scenes are just cut out. It's really a disappointment" she told the Australian YA Circle, in an Interview earlier in March 2012. "I don't want Jellicoe Road to be those books that should never have been made into a film sort of thing." The development of the film is being kept strictly closed, but there is talks about cast members being auditioned as close as late this year.

Selected works

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books". YALSA. American Library Association. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  2. Lateral Learning Speakers' Agency Archived 31 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. "Brief Biographies: Famous Authors". Biography.jrank.org. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  4. "Film Critics Circle of Australia website". Fcca.com.au. 2013-09-15. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  5. BILBY Awards Previous winners
  6. "2007 ABIA Shortlists" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  7. "Puffin at Penguin Books Australia - Author Details". Penguin.com.au. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  8. Official website
  9. "The Gorgon in the Gully: Pocket Money Puffins". Penguin Books Australia. Retrieved 16 October 2011.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.