Ann Kelley

Ann Kelley (born 17 December 1941) is the author of The Burying Beetle (shortlisted for the Branford Boase Award) and The Bower Bird (Winner of the Costa Children’s Book of the Year Award)[1]]. She has written several collections of poetry and photographs before completing her novels which are the first two in a trilogy.

Contents

Biography

The Burying Beetle and The Bower Bird chronicle the story of Gussie, a 12 year-old girl who suffers from pulmonary atresia, a rare heart disease. Gussie is marked by her vivacity and thirst for knowledge, living every day to the full.
The character is modelled on Ann’s late son, Nathan Kelley, who suffered from the same congenital heart condition. When her son was born doctors said he would not survive the week and later said he would never walk. But Nathan defied predictions and lived to become an accomplished student. He had a passion for marine life and discovered two new fish cancers at the age of 16 (both registered with the Smithsonian[1] in America). Nathan went on to study biology and space sciences at Reading University and University College London. Nathan died at age 24, a week after receiving a heart and lung transplant in December 1985.[2]

Ann began writing poetry years after Nathan’s death and published The Poetry Remedy in 1999 and then Paper Whites in 2001. Ann’s first novel, The Burying Beetle, was published in 2005 by Luath Press Ltd and Because We Have Reached That Place (poetry) was published by Oversteps Books in 2006.[3]

Her most recent work, The Bower Bird (also published by Luath) won the Costa Children’s Book of the Year Award (formerly the Whitbread Prize) in 2007.

Ann has said about her books:
‘Gussie just came to me. I don’t write for children, I write for a reader. It’s a glimpse into the head of a child with a chronic disease, who has to find a way to live her short life to the full… Gussie isn’t my son. She is an amalgamation of several people – my daughter, my grand daughter, my son and me – and she is mostly herself. My son knew that even with a successful transplant, in those days he would only have had a few more years. But he was so happy to have been given that chance. I think that is why I write about Gussie – to make people see the importance of being an organ donor. Please be an Organ Donor.’

Ann has won several prizes for her poetry and has run courses for aspiring poets from her home. She also conducts special study units in poetry writing for medical students and speaks about her work with patients at medical conferences. She is an honorary teaching fellow at Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Exeter and Plymouth. Her collected photographic works are Born and Bred (1988) and Sea Front (2005).

Ann Kelley also has a daughter, Caroline, and two grandchildren. She lives with her second husband in St Ives, Cornwall.

Works

Novels
The Bower Bird, 2007 ISBN 1906307326
The Burying Beetle, 2005 ISBN 1905222084 ISBN 9781842820990
Inchworm, 2008
Poetry
Because We Have Reached That Place, 2006
Paper Whites (poetry and photography), 2001
The Poetry Remedy, 1999

Photography
Sea Front, 2005
Born and Bred, 1988

Audio Books
Nine Lives: Cat Tales

References

External links