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Helen FitzGerald

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Name
  
Helen FitzGerald

Role
  
Novelist

Spouse
  
Sergio Casci




Books
  
The Cry, Dead Lovely, My Last Confession, The Donor, Hot Flush

Letzte beichte by helen fitzgerald


Helen FitzGerald (born September 21, 1966 in Shepparton, Australia) is a bestselling novelist and screenwriter. Her debut novel, Dead Lovely, was originally published by Allen & Unwin in September 2007 and her latest novel, The Exit, was published in February 2015 by Faber & Faber. Viral, her next novel, is due to be released in February 2016.

Contents

Background

She was raised in the country town of Kilmore, Victoria, being the twelfth in a large family of thirteen children. She studied English and History at the University of Melbourne, before later attending Glasgow University where she completed a Diploma and Masters in Social Work. She began writing while working as a criminal justice social worker, where for a period she worked with serious sex offenders in Glasgow's Barlinnie Prison. She quit this job for a time to focus solely on her writing career, before returning to the field part-time. She cites her experience as a social worker an inspiration in the subject matter of her writing.

Writing

FitzGerald began as a screenwriter, producing a series of educational children's dramas for BBC Scotland. However, she became frustrated with the industry when none of her subsequent screenplays were produced and turned to novel-writing. She states that the rules of screenwriting are very stringent, but that in having learned them she has improved as a writer.

Her books are mostly thrillers, though she herself has described her genre as "Domestic Noir", a term coined by her fellow author Julia Crouch.

Works

FitzGerald has written twelve novels to date:

  • Dead Lovely, published 2007
  • The Devil's Staircase, published 2009
  • My Last Confession, published 2009
  • Bloody Women, published 2009
  • Amelia O'Donohue is SO not a Virgin, published 2010
  • The Donor, published 2011
  • Hot Flush, published 2011
  • The Duplicate, published 2012
  • Deviant, published 2013
  • The Cry, published 2013
  • The Exit, published 2015
  • Viral, published 2016
  • Critical Reaction

    Some critics noted that FitzGerald's first book, while generally described as a crime novel, did not follow the traditional rules of the genre. They argued that it belonged to a different, more psychologically complex tradition, characterised by the dark humour and flawed anti-heroines of writers such as Tama Janowitz and Fay Weldon. Novelist Mark Abernethy wrote of FitzGerald: "She has managed to do what Fay Weldon did in The Life and Loves of a She-Devil, which is to find the joke in what appalls us." Australian critic Sally Murphy described the novel as compelling but hard to classify, with "elements of chick-lit mixed with ghastly scenes of murder and retribution", while Adelaide writer Cath Kenneally highlighted FitzGerald's technique of underpinning audacious and potentially shocking material - "working blue" - with "sociological acumen".

    The Cry has received the widest critical acclaim of any of FitzGerald's novels to date, with Doug Johnstone from The Independent on Sunday stating: "Astonishingly good. It is utterly harrowing, completely plausible, constantly nerve-shredding ... It plays on the deepest, darkest fears of all parents about their children, and embeds that everyday terror in a plot so up-to-the-minute that you'll swear it's been lifted from the pages of a newspaper ... The Cry is a remarkable novel - its devastating power all the stronger for its realistic rendering. Brilliant stuff."

    Nominations

    FitzGerald has been nominated for several awards, including:

  • The 2010 Davitt Award for The Devil's Staircase
  • The 2010 Spinetingler Award for The Devil's Staircase
  • The 2012 Davitt Award for The Donor
  • The 2014 Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award for The Cry
  • The 2014 Davitt Award for The Cry
  • References

    Helen FitzGerald Wikipedia


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