Carrie Tiffany

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Born1965 (age 6061)
Halifax, England
OccupationWriter
Carrie Tiffany
Born1965 (age 6061)
Halifax, England
OccupationWriter

Carrie Tiffany is an English-born Australian novelist and former park ranger.

Tiffany was born in Halifax, West Yorkshire and migrated to Australia with her family in the early 1970s. She grew up in Perth, Western Australia. In her early twenties she worked as a park ranger in Central Australia.

She moved to Victoria to work as a forest ranger in the Central Highlands and later began working as a writer, focusing mainly on sustainable agriculture and the environment.[1] Tiffany became the editor of Victorian Landcare Magazine in 1996. Tiffany took up writing fiction and completed a master's degree in Creative Writing at RMIT University and a doctorate at Deakin University.[2] Tiffany mentors writers through the Australian Writer Mentors program[3] and has taught writing at many institutions including RMIT University, University of Melbourne, Writers Victoria and the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. She teaches the online writing a novel program at Faber Writing Academy.[4]

Tiffany's debut novel, Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living, was a remarkable success on its release in 2005, winning several awards and shortlisted for some major awards, including the Miles Franklin Award and the Orange Prize.

Her second novel, Mateship with Birds, was published in 2012 and won the inaugural Stella Prize. Her third novel, Exploded View, was published in 2019 to critical acclaim.[5][6] Her Mildura community sound art project regenerating John Shaw Neilson’s 1905 poem, ‘The Loving Tree’ featured on ABC Radio National in 2017.[7]

Tiffany was a member of the 2008 bid committee that secured Melbourne as UNESCO’s second City of Literature.[8] In 2023 she served as a Digital Lending Rights Ambassador during the Australian Society of Authors successful campaign to have the Federal Government recognise the income Australian authors lose through loans and other free uses of their e—books in public lending libraries.[9]

Awards and nominations

Awards and Nominations
YearName of WorkPrizePrize CategoryResultRef
2003 Everyman's Rules for Scientific LivingVictorian Premier's Literary AwardUnpublished ManuscriptWon[10]
2005 WA Premier's Book AwardFictionWon[11]
2006 Guardian First Book AwardShortlisted[12]
Miles Franklin AwardShortlisted[12]
Victorian Premier's Literary AwardFictionShortlisted[13]
2007 International Dublin Literary Award Longlisted
Nita Kibble Literary AwardsDobbie Encouragement AwardWon
Orange Prize for FictionShortlisted[14]
2012 Mateship with BirdsMelbourne Prize for LiteratureBest Writing AwardShortlisted
2012 Victorian Premier's Literary AwardFictionShortlisted
2013 Miles Franklin AwardShortlisted
NSW Premier's Literary AwardsChristina Stead Prize for FictionWon
Stella PrizeWon
Women's Prize for FictionShortlisted
2014 International Dublin Literary Longlisted
2019 Exploded ViewUniversity of Queensland Fiction Book AwardWon[15]
2020 ALS Gold MedalShortlisted[16]
Miles Franklin AwardShortlisted[17]
Voss Literary PrizeShortlisted[18]
2024 "Seven snakes" Melbourne Prize for Literature Writers Prize Won [19]

Bibliography

  • (2005). Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living. Pan Macmillan Australia. ISBN 9780330421911.
  • (2012). Mateship with Birds. Pan Macmillan Australia. ISBN 9781742610764.
  • (2019). Exploded View. Text Publishing. ISBN 9781925773415.

Notes

References

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