Lisa St Aubin de Terán

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Lisa St Aubin de Terán (1953- ) is an award-winning English novelist, writer of autobiographical fictions, and memoirist.


Lisa St Aubin de Terán was born in 1953 and brought up in Clapham in South London. She attended the James Allen's Girls' School. Her memoir, Hacienda (1998) describes how she abandoned her studies at the age of 17 for a disastrous first marriage to a sadistic Venezuelan landowner, Jaime Terán, living for seven years at a remote farm in the Andean region of Venezuela.

Her second husband was the Scottish poet and novelist George MacBeth. In 1982 she published her first novel, Keepers of the House, winning the Somerset Maugham Award and a place on Granta's 'Best of Young British Novelists' list (1983, issue #7). The Slow Train to Milan, winner of the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, followed in 1983.

Her third husband was the painter, Robbie Duff Scott (born 1959), with whom she moved to Umbria, describing her life there in A Valley in Italy (1995).

Her work includes further novels and memoirs (including Memory Maps in 2003), short-story collections and poetry. Otto (Virago), a fictionalised biography, was published in 2006.

She has three children, including by her first husband a daughter, Iseult Teran, also a novelist. She lives in Amsterdam with her partner Mees Van Deth, where she runs a film company and has set up the Terán Foundation in Mozambique. This phase of her life has been described in Mozambique Mysteries (2007).

[edit] Booklist

  • Keepers of the House (novel) (Somerset Maugham Award), 1982
  • The Slow Train to Milan, 1983
  • The Tiger, 1984
  • The Bay of Silence, 1986
  • Black Idol, 1987
  • Joanna, 1990
  • Off the Rails: Memoirs of a Train Addict (memoir), 1990
  • Nocturne, 1992
  • The Tiger, 1994
  • A Valley in Italy, 1995
  • The Hacienda, 1998
  • The Palace, 1998
  • Indiscreet Journeys; Stories of Women on the Road
  • Southpaw (short stories), 1999
  • Virago Book of Wanderlust and Dreams (anthology), 1999
  • The Marble Mountain and other stories (short stories)
  • The High Place (poetry)
  • Memory Maps, 2003
  • Otto, 2006
  • Mozambique Mysteries, 2007

[edit] External links

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