Carys Bray

Carys Bray is a British writer whose 2014 debut novel was critically acclaimed.[1][2]

Carys Bray
Occupationnovelist
NationalityUnited Kingdom
Notable awardsAuthors’ Club Best First Novel Award; Scott Prize; Edge Hill Prize

Bray is a lapsed Mormon, and her novel is about a Mormon family who undergo a crisis of faith.[1][2]

Her second novel, The Museum of You, was published in 2016.[3]

According to The Bookseller she earned a "strong five figure" advance, in 2019, for an upcoming novel about climate change, entitled When the Lights Go Out.[3]

Bray uses a treadmill desk, when writing.[4]

Awards and honours

  • 2015, Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award[5]
  • 2011, Scott Prize[5]
  • 2010, Edge Hill Prize[5]
gollark: I thought that was just video codecs and stuff.
gollark: And why is the "media engine" massively bigger than the general-purpose GPU bits?
gollark: The display controllers are that big? Wow.
gollark: You could cut it down a lot and have a nice coaster.
gollark: Very shiny.

References

  1. Grace McCleen (2014-06-20). "A Song for Issy Bradley by Carys Bray review – admirably unsentimental". The Guardian. Retrieved 2020-01-01. The book portrays radical religion through the eyes, not of a convert, but the profoundly disillusioned. Bray is wincingly honest and emotions are portrayed with an assurance that comes from understanding: Claire is hoarding 10 pounds a week from the housekeeping money without knowing why; her desire to weep in gratitude as cars pull over during the ambulance ride to the hospital with Issy, wanting not to tell her unconscious daughter stories as she sits in the intensive care unit but memorise every detail of her; Zippy's conviction that her sister's body is completely devoid of "Issy-ness" upon seeing it in the mortuary – all these ring true and make for arresting reading.
  2. Shelley Harris (2014-06-29). "A Song For Issy Bradley, By Carys Bray, book review: Portrait of Mormons in crisis … by an insider". The Independent. Retrieved 2020-01-01. Part of the fascination of this novel is that it’s a story told from the inside; Bray grew up Mormon before renouncing the faith in her early thirties, and she shows us this arcane world without resorting to caricature.
  3. Heloise Wood (2019-11-29). "Hutchinson snaps up Carys Bray's climate change novel". The Bookseller. Retrieved 2020-01-01.
  4. Susie Steiner (2017-06-29). "Is there any way to avoid writer's butt?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2020-01-01. Carys Bray, author of A Song for Issy Bradley, writes at a treadmill desk, as does Emma Donoghue, author of Room, and US thriller writer Michael Connolly.
  5. "Carys Bray - Literature". literature.britishcouncil.org. Retrieved 1 May 2020.


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