Mandy Sayer

Mandy Sayer (born 1963) is an Australian street performer-turned-writer (memoirist, novelist, poet, anthologist, reviewer, columnist).

She was born in 1963 in the Sydney suburb of Marrickville, the third of three children. Her parents separated when she was aged ten.[1] In 1983, she travelled to the United States with her father Gerry, a bohemian jazz performer.[1] They busked together on the streets of New York, New Orleans and Colorado for three years; Gerry played drums and Mandy tap danced.

In 1985 in New Orleans at Mardi Gras she met Yusef Komunyakaa, an African-American poet (later to win a Pulitzer Prize). They discovered a mutual interest in jazz and the novels of Patrick White.[2] That year they married, and he became a professor at Indiana University, where she studied for an MA in English and Creative Writing with his financial support.[2] They divorced in 1995, after the birth of his child from a one-night stand he had with a former girlfriend. During their marriage, Sayer miscarried one child to him and terminated another pregnancy against his wishes.[3] She writes about this in her 2014 The Poet's Wife.

On return to Australia, she gained a Doctorate from the University of Technology Sydney. In 2003, she married novelist and playwright Louis Nowra, becoming his third wife. They had worked together when they co-edited the anthology In the Gutter ... Looking at the Stars in 2000. They have separate homes not far from each other near Kings Cross, in which their daytime writing activities are conducted, and they come together in the evening.[2][4]

In February 2014, they were named joint holders of the 2014 Copyright Agency Non-Fiction Writer-in-Residence at the University of Technology.[5]

Awards

  • Myrtle Armstrong Fiction Prize
  • Keisler Poetry Award
  • Davitt Award

Work

Mandy Sayer's writings include:

Memoirs
Novels
Short story collections
  • Fifteen Kinds of Desire (2001)
  • Misfits & me (2018)
Anthologies
  • In the Gutter ... Looking at the Stars (2000; co-edited with Louis Nowra)
  • The Australian Long Story (2009)
gollark: Wait, no, you already said something about "while event.pull()" or something being bad, never mind. I can't think of alternatives other than having the data reader thing only send data when it gets a message requesting it, or bringing in an HTTP server or something to store everything, but those would also both not be efficient.
gollark: Ah. Hmm. Make it pull from the queue a bit faster than the other end sends messages?
gollark: You would still get a massive backlog if you didn't read it at the same speed it was sent, but you could use the linked cards to send it directly/only to the one computer which needs it really fast.
gollark: You would still have to spam and read messages very fast, but it wouldn't affect anything else.
gollark: There are linked cards, which are paired card things which can just directly send/receive messages to each other over any distance. If the problem here is that your data has to run across some central network/dispatcher/whatever, then you could use linked cards in the thing gathering data and the thing needing it urgently to send messages between them very fast without using that.
External video
One Plus One: Mandy Sayer, One Plus One, ABC News

References

  1. Yvonne Preston, "Tap-dancing to life's hard rhythm", Canberra Times, 7 February 1998, Panorama, p. 9
  2. Jacqueline Maley, Sydney Morning Herald, 25 January 2014. "Two lives". Retrieved 19 May 2014
  3. Books Now: "Telling it like it was: Mandy Sayer's troubled memoir" Archived 2 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 19 May 2014
  4. Sydney Morning Herald, 24 July 2004. "Under the covers". Retrieved 19 May 2014
  5. UTS Newsroom, 21 February 2014. "Leading literary duo appointed to UTS residency". Retrieved 19 May 2014
  6. A film based on the book, to be directed by Cherie Nowlan and starring Cate Blanchett and Geoffrey Rush, was announced in 1998, but appears never to have been made.
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