Laura Marney is a Scottish novelist and short-story writer.
Biography
editThe author of five novels and numerous short stories, Laura Marney is a member of the Glasgow G7 group of writers (Alan Bissett, Nick Brookes, Rodge Glass, Laura Marney, Alison Miller, Zoë Strachan and Louise Welsh).[1]
Born and brought up in Glasgow, Marney co-founded a theatre group Theatre Raskolnikov there.[2] Since "nobody else could be bothered", she also began writing scripts for the company.[3]
Marney is a graduate of the MLitt course in Creative Writing at the University of Glasgow, and now teaches there.[4] Her writing has been described as black humour.[5] She also writes for radio.[6]
Marney tutored Leela Soma, one of the 21 writers and 21 artists commissioned by Glasgow Women's Library in 2012 to create work to celebrate the 21st birthday of the organisation.
Bibliography
editNovels
edit- No Wonder I Take A Drink (2004)
- Nobody Loves a Ginger Baby (2005)
- Only Strange People Go to Church (2006)
- My Best Friend has Issues (2008)
- For Faughie's Sake (2014)
References
edit- ^ MacLeod, Heather (20 September 2005). "The Book Group" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 May 2006.
- ^ Robinson, David (3 July 2004). "All you have to do is". The Scotsman.
- ^ Barcelona Review interview, 2005
- ^ "Authors > Laura Marney". Saraband. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
- ^ Laura Marney cited by Jenny Brown in "Dark and dour Scottish writing 'needs sexing up'". The Scotsman. 28 February 2005.
- ^ "Laura Marney". Books from Scotland. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
External links
edit- Interview in The Scotsman, (2004)
- Interview in Barcelona Review, (2005)
- Radio interview (2009)[permanent dead link ]
- Short story: The Taste of Women, Mad Hatters Review, No.7, February 2007
- Short story: Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow, Glasgow 2020
- Short story: And the winner is, Barcelona Review, Issue 50, October – December 2005
- Creative Writing at Glasgow University