Emma Richler
Emma Richler (born 1961) is a British/Canadian writer.[1]
Emma Richler | |
---|---|
Born | 1961 |
Nationality | British-Canadian |
Occupation | writer |
Years active | 2000s-present |
Known for | Sister Crazy, Feed My Dear Dogs |
Relatives | Mordecai Richler, father Jacob Richler, brother Noah Richler, brother Daniel Richler, brother |
Biography
Born in London, England, she is the daughter of author Mordecai Richler.[2] She moved with her family to Montreal, Quebec in 1972. She briefly attended the University of Toronto before transferring to Universite de Provence to complete her education.[3][4]
She first worked as an actress, performing in stage, film and television roles in both Canada and England until 1996,[4][5] and later worked in publishing before publishing her debut short story collection Sister Crazy in 2001.[2] The book was a shortlisted nominee for the Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize in 2002.
Her first novel, Feed My Dear Dogs, was published in 2005.[6] Her second, Be My Wolff, was published in 2017.[7]
gollark: And Ice Lake apparently has very good (for an integrated GPU) graphics performance.
gollark: They're making dedicated cards next year.
gollark: For all the other problems with Intel, their Linux drivers are *great*.
gollark: It actually seems like the whole setup handling them is deliberately byzantine and overcomplicated to stop this sort of thing.
gollark: I am annoyed by how hard Amazon makes it to get the ebooks I bought (realistically, bought a license to legally) out of their walled garden and onto Calibre in some sort of actually standard format. Apparently I can't get any sort of usable files off the Android app, and I've lost my actual Kindle hardware, so I've had to download some ancient version of their Windows client and run it in Wine.
References
- "In the family business: It's in the Blood". Edmonton Journal, 27 May 2001.
- "And Emma makes five: Sister Crazy joins `an embarrassment of Richlers'". Ottawa Citizen, 6 May 2001.
- "This Richler shuns the light: Emma Richler loves writing but not the `unnatural' job of self-promotion". Montreal Gazette, 19 May 2001.
- "Contemporary Authors Online". Biography in Context. Gale. 2003. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
- "Another Richler takes up the quill ; Emma's writing has family parallels". Toronto Star, 1 February 2001.
- "Like life only different". Ottawa Citizen, 20 March 2005.
- "Be My Wolff by Emma Richler". Quill & Quire, April 2017.
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