Ann Charney

Ann Charney is a Canadian novelist, short story writer and journalist.

Career

Her most recent novel, Life Class, is a story of displacement and ambition played out in the art circles of Venice, New York and Montreal and is dedicated to her late husband, the artist Melvin Charney who died in September 2012.

Her previous novel is Distantly Related to Freud, the coming of age story of a young girl, who dreams of becoming a writer and a femme fatale.

Her most widely published novel is Dobryd, the story of a child discovering freedom amid the chaos of war's aftermath.

Charney has been a columnist for the magazine Maclean's, and a frequent contributor to Saturday Night, Ms., and other leading US and Canadian publications.

Her work has been published in Canada, the US, France, Germany and Italy.

Awards and honors

She has won Canadian National Magazine Awards both for her fiction and non-fiction, the Canadian Authors' Association Prize for non-fiction, was a finalist for a QSPELL Award for Defiance in their Eyes, and was made an officer of the French Order of Arts and Letters.[1]

gollark: In general, bugs which somehow mess up computer IDs are likely to cause damage *anyway*.
gollark: I don't know how it would have gotten onto computer 0.
gollark: Yes, they decided to bring it up now because someone either randomly installed it or computer 0 did something.
gollark: I went through two different sandboxing implementations before developing YAFSS. It changed something like every version. Troubling times.
gollark: Not really, the original versions were very primitive.

References

  1. Curran, Peggy (19 September 2012). "Melvin Charney: A towering figure in Montreal architecture". Montreal Gazette. Archived from the original on 23 September 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
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