Caroline Moir

Caroline Moir is a British author based in Kendal UK, close to the Lake District National Park.

She is known for writing plays, fiction (genres include the dystopic and modern gothic) and creative non-fiction. A focus of her work is also as an educationalist and promoter of literary arts. She studied English & philosophy at the University of Birmingham, masters at Lancaster University and a PhD from the University of Glasgow.[1]

Moir has written two novels Jemillia (2007) and The Brockenspectre (2011), with work on the third commencing from 2013/14. Commissions include BBC Radio, Ripon Cathedral and Kendal Community Theatre.[2][3]

Moir collaborates regularly with fellow writers and artists, amongst them Guy Wilson (The Armed Man). Through these collaborations, she is active in a number of progressive literary circles, co-establishing The Leeds Peace Poetry Festival in 2003 and Warehouse Writers Workshop at The Brewery Arts Centre Kendal in 2006. In 2015/16 as a founder and member of Kendal Community Theatre, she co-created Kendal Yarns Festival - a week long festival of plays featuring over 50 new plays by people from the region, with involvement from a number of nationally acclaimed theatre directors.[4]

Publications

  • Timeo Danaos (From Glasgow to Saturn, 2011);[5][6]
  • A goat, a duppy & a walnut tree (Unbound Press/Spilling Ink Review, 2011);[7][8]
  • Homage à Rabelais en Roussillon (Brand Magazine, 2010)[9]
  • St Wilfred of Ripon or A Tale of Two Tonsures(commissioned & performed, 2009)
  • Nusf Sahaa (BRAND, 2009)
  • Asda (swampwriting, 2008)
  • The Kendal Shepherds' Play (commissioned & performed, 2007); *Flight (Muse, 2006)
  • Mary's Story (commissioned & performed, 2005);[10]
  • The Man Who Told a Lie (Transmission, 2005)
  • A Passion for Kendal[11][12]
  • Lady Anne Clifford: A Woman Cast Out
gollark: Wait, an even better idea: *1 in 20000* views will just randomly kill your stuff with no warning.
gollark: The negatives are that anyone else can viewbomb your stuff. This is kind of obvious.
gollark: (sidenote: remove sickness already; having to constantly fear viewbombing is stupid)
gollark: I don't see why anyone would complain, though if you go around listing a bunch of growing offspring you may run into viewbombing.
gollark: It will at least result in the decline of the metallocracy.

References

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