Sally Emerson

Sally Emerson is a novelist, anthologist and travel writer.

Education and career

Emerson was educated at Wimbledon High School and St. Anne’s College, Oxford.

Between school and university she was editorial assistant and writer on the magazine Books and Bookmen which she later went on to edit.

While at Oxford she edited Isis,[1] won the Vogue Talent Contest for writing in 1972 and the Radio Times Young Journalist of the Year competition along with a Catherine Pakenham Award and wrote for The Times.

She worked on The Illustrated London News then became assistant editor of Plays and Players in 1976. From 1978-1985 she was editor of the literary magazine Books and Bookmen (which briefly became Book Choice then returned to the title Books and Bookmen).[2]

In 1980 she published her first novel Second Sight. It won a Yorkshire Post Best First Novel award. In the US the title was The Second Sight of Jennifer Hamilton. Next came Listeners in 1983, the bestsellers Fire Child (1987), Separation (titled Hush Little Baby in the US) 1992 and Heat set in Washington DC in 1998. Broken Bodies came out in 2001.

Her anthologies, collections of poetry and prose on birth, love and death are ‘In Loving Memory: A Collection for Memorial Services, Funerals and Just Getting By’ (2004),[3]Be Mine: An Anthology for Lovers, Weddings and Ever After’ (2007) and ‘New Life, An Anthology for Parenthood’ (2009).

Her other non-fiction anthology titles include ‘A Celebration of Babies’ (1986), ‘The Kingfisher Nursery Treasury’ (1988),

Since 2003 she has also worked as a travel writer for the Sunday Times[4] as well as contributing to other newspapers.

Her six novels are being republished in 2017 by Quartet in its Rediscovered Classics series, with the dark love stories Fire Child and Heat coming out in March and the coming of age novel Second Sight in June along with Separation, another dark love story but with a child as the central heroine.[5]

She married Peter Stothard in 1980 and they have two children, the novelist Anna Stothard and journalist Michael Stothard, born 1983 and 1987. In the early 1980s, while transiently separated from her husband, she had an affair with writer Douglas Adams.

Books

  • Second Sight (1980), ISBN 0-7181-1965-7
  • Listeners (1983), ISBN 0-7181-2134-1
  • A Celebration of Babies: An Anthology of Poetry and Prose (ed., 1986), ISBN 0-216-91864-2
  • Fire Child (1987), ISBN 0-7181-2832-X
  • Separation (1992), ISBN 0-356-19587-2
  • Heat (1998), ISBN 0-316-64317-3
  • Broken Bodies (2001), ISBN 0-316-85483-2
  • In Loving Memory: A Collection for Memorial Services, Funerals and Just Getting By (ed., 2004), ISBN 0-316-72599-4
  • New Life, An Anthology for Parenthood, ISBN 978-1-4087-0112-6
  • The Kingfisher Nursery Treasury, ISBN 0-86272-334-5
  • Be Mine: An Anthology for Lovers, Weddings and Ever After (ed., forthcoming 2007), ISBN 0-316-73258-3
  • Fire Child (2017), ISBN 0704374285
  • Heat (2017), ISBN 0704374277
gollark: I don't THINK so.
gollark: PETA will destroy you.
gollark: At least it has generics.
gollark: Oh, and it's not a special case as much as just annoying, but it's a compile error to not use a variable or import. Which I would find reasonable as a linter rule, but it makes quickly editing and testing bits of code more annoying.
gollark: As well as having special casing for stuff, it often is just pointlessly hostile to abstracting anything:- lol no generics- you literally cannot define a well-typed `min`/`max` function (like Lua has). Unless you do something weird like... implement an interface for that on all the builtin number types, and I don't know if it would let you do that.- no map/filter/reduce stuff- `if err != nil { return err }`- the recommended way to map over an array in parallel, if I remember right, is to run a goroutine for every element which does whatever task you want then adds the result to a shared "output" array, and use a WaitGroup thingy to wait for all the goroutines. This is a lot of boilerplate.

References

  1. "My hols: Sally Emerson | The Sunday Times". www.thesundaytimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
  2. Roger, Interview by Sylvia. "Class act". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
  3. "How you live with death | The Times". The Times. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
  4. "Dumbo in the jungle | The Sunday Times". www.thesundaytimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
  5. "Sally Emerson". Sally Emerson. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
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