Paddy Richardson
Paddy Richardson | |
---|---|
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | New Zealand |
Paddy Richardson is a writer who lives in Dunedin, New Zealand. She has published two collections of short stories, Choices (Hard Echo Press, 1986) and If We Were Lebanese (Steele Roberts, 2003), and three novels, The Company of a Daughter (Steele Roberts, 2000), A Year to Learn A Woman (Penguin, 2008) and Hunting Blind (Penguin, 2010). Her work has appeared in journals, anthologies, and on radio, and has been highly commended in several writing competitions, including the Katherine Mansfield and Sunday Star Times Short Story Awards. She has been awarded the University of Otago Burns Fellowship, the Beatson fellowship and the University of Otago/James Wallace residency.
Life
Richardson lives and writes in Broad Bay, a beach settlement on the Otago Peninsula.[1] She wrote part of her second novel A Year to Learn A Woman while living on the Kapiti Coast after being awarded the $6000 Foxton Fellowship, which included a month's residency in a cottage at Foxton Beach.[2]
Novels
- 2000: The Company of A Daughter (Steele Roberts)
- 2008: A Year to Learn A Woman (Penguin Books)
- 2010: Hunting Blind (Penguin Books)[3]
Other Writing
- 1986: Choices (collection of short stories)
- 2003: If We Were Lebanese (collection of short stories)
References
- ↑ Interview with Paddy on official http://steeleroberts.co.nz/books/isbn/1-877228-77-X Steele Roberts official website
- ↑ Schofield, Edith (27 September 2008). "A novel comes creeping". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
- ↑ Official Penguin website