Alice_Jolly

Alice Jolly

Alice Jolly

English novelist, playwright and memoirist


Alice Jolly (born 1966) is an English novelist, playwright and memoirist, who has won both the Royal Society of Literature’s V. S. Pritchett Memorial Prize for short stories (2014) and the PEN/Ackerley Prize for autobiography (2016).

Her novel Mary Ann Sate, Imbecile was runner up for The Rathbones Folio Prize in 2019 and was also longlisted for The Ondaatje Prize also in 2019.

She was awarded an O. Henry Award in 2021. She reviews for The Times Literary Supplement, The Literary Review and The Guardian.

Biography

Jolly graduated from Worcester College, Oxford with a degree in Modern History in 1989.[1]

She teaches on the Creative Writing M.St. course at the University of Oxford.[2]

In 2014, Jolly was awarded the Royal Society of Literature's V.S. Pritchett Memorial Prize for her short story, Ray the Rottweiler.[3] In 2016, she was awarded the PEN/Ackerley Prize for her memoir, Dead Babies and Seaside Towns, the publication of which was crowdfunded.[2]

Her novel Mary Ann Sate, Imbecile was runner up for The Rathbones Folio Prize in 2019 and was also longlisted for The Ondaatje Prize also in 2019.

She was awarded an O. Henry Award in 2021. She reviews for The Times Literary Supplement, The Literary Review and The Guardian.

Jolly is married to a lawyer, Stephen Kinsella. They have two children, Thomas and Hope, and live in Gloucestershire.[4]

Published works

  • What the Eye Doesn’t See (Simon & Schuster, 2003)
  • If Only You Knew (Simon & Schuster, 2006)
  • Dead Babies and Seaside Towns (Unbound, 2015) is a memoir of Jolly's journey of using a surrogate to carry her second child.[5]
  • Mary Ann Sate, Imbecile (Unbound, 2018)
  • Between the Regions of Kindness (Unbound 2019)
  • A Saint in Swindon (Fairlight, 2020).

Jolly has also written a number of plays for the Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham and the Cheltenham Literature Festival.


References

  1. Oxford University, Department for Continuing Education web-page (accessed on 5 September 2016)
  2. Fiction: Ray the Rottweiler, Prospect, January 2015
  3. Cotswold Life, Living with Hope, 1 April 2016
  4. Helen Rumbelow (20 July 2015). "Surrogacy? It makes the Virgin Birth seem easy". The Times. pp. 6–7. Retrieved 8 March 2017. Alt URL

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