Kate Pullinger

Kate Pullinger is a Canadian novelist and author of digital fiction, lecturing at De Montfort University, England. She was born in Cranbrook, British Columbia, and went to high school on Vancouver Island. She dropped out of McGill University, Montreal after a year and a half and subsequently worked for a year in a copper mine in the Yukon. She then travelled and settled in London, where she now resides.

Career

Pullinger won the 2009 Governor General's Award[1] for her novel The Mistress of Nothing, a fictionalized tale of Sally Naldrett, lady's maid to Lady Duff Gordon, who traveled with her mistress to Egypt in Victorian times. Pullinger's earlier books include the novels When the Monster Dies (1989), Where Does Kissing End? (1992), The Last Time I Saw Jane (1996), Weird Sister (1999) and A Little Stranger (2004 in Canada and 2006 in the UK), as well as the short story collections Tiny Lies (1988) and My Life as a Girl in a Men's Prison (1997). She co-wrote the novelization of the film The Piano with director Jane Campion.

Pullinger also writes for film and for the digital media. Her most recent digital works are Flight Paths (2007-), a "networked novel" created in collaboration with worldwide participants, and Inanimate Alice (2005-), a series of multimedia novels, both created with writer/artist Chris Joseph,[2][3][4] and The Breathing Wall (2004), experimental fiction that responds to the reader's rate of breathing, made with collaborators Stefan Schemat and Chris Joseph.[5]

Pullinger was the lead writer on the 24hr Book Project, a project to write, edit and produce a novel in 24 hours, which was managed by CompletelyNovel.com in collaboration with if:book (a book industry think tank), the Society of Young Publishers and Spread the Word (a writer development agency).[6]

Pullinger has been writer-in-residence at the Battersea Arts Centre, the University of Reading, the prisons HMP Gartree and HMP Maidstone, and in Maidstone itself. She was Judith E. Wilson Visiting Writing Fellow at Jesus College, University of Cambridge (1995/96), and the Visiting Writing Fellow at The Women's Library, London Metropolitan University (2001/03). She was Research Fellow for The trAce Online Writing Centre Arts and Humanities Research Board project Mapping the Transition from Page to Screen, where she investigated new forms of electronic narrative (2002/03). She teaches on the MA in Creative Writing and New Media at De Montfort University, Leicester, UK, where she is Reader in Creative Writing and New Media. She is a member of the Production and Research in Transliteracy (PART) group at De Montfort, researching transliteracy. She is the Royal Literary Fund Virtual Fellow and Professor of Creative Writing at Bath Spa University.[7]

References

  1. "Winners of 2009 Governor General’s Literary Awards announced by the Canada Council for the Arts", Montreal, November 17, 2009.
  2. Pauli, Michelle (7 December 2006). "Down with Alice". Guardian (London: Guardian). Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  3. Chin, Yvette. "DigitAlice – A Conversation with Inanimate Alice Producer Ian Harper". DigitalBookWorld.com. DigitalBookWorld.com. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  4. PR Web (17 November 2011). "International Acclaim Grows for Inanimate Alice". Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  5. Ensslin, A (2007). "From (w)reader to breather: Cybertextual retro-intentionalisation". hdl:10242/43790.
  6. "The Clock's ticking...". The Bookseller. October 5, 2009. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
  7. "Weldon and Hensher head to Bath Spa". The Bookseller. Retrieved 9 November 2012.

External links