Owen Marshall

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For the TV show, see Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law

Owen Marshall (born 1941, Te Kuiti, New Zealand) is the pen name of Owen Marshall Jones, a New Zealand short story writer and novelist. The third son of a Methodist minister, he came of age in Blenheim and Timaru, and graduated from the University of Canterbury with an MA in English in 1964. Marshall taught in a rural boys' high school for 25 years before becoming a full time author.

Marshall has been ranked among the very finest, if not the finest, New Zealand’s short story writers.[citation needed] This would place him in the same category as Janet Frame and Frank Sargeson.

[edit] Works

  • Supper Waltz Wilson, and Other New Zealand Stories. Christchurch : Pegasus, 1979.
  • The Master of Big Jingles & Other Stories. Dunedin : McIndoe, 1982.
  • The Day Hemingway Died, and Other Stories. Dunedin : McIndoe, 1984.
  • The Lynx Hunter, and Other Stories. Dunedin : McIndoe, 1987.
  • An indirect geography [radio narrative] by Owen Marshall. 1990.
  • The Divided World : Selected Stories. Dunedin : John McIndoe, 1989.
  • Tomorrow We Save the Orphans : Fiction. Dunedin : John McIndoe, 1992.
  • The Ace of Diamonds Gang and Other Stories: McIndoe Press, 1993.
  • Timeless Land. Painter, Grahame Sydney; poet, Brian Turner; writer, Owen Marshall; with an introduction by Sam Neill. Dunedin : Longacre Press, 1995.
  • The Best of Owen Marshall's Short Stories. Auckland : Random House, 1997.
  • Harlequin Rex. Auckland: Vintage, 1999. (Novel)
  • When Gravity Snaps. Auckland: Vintage, 2002.(Short stories)

[edit] See also

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