Discipline: Literature

Joanna Briscoe

Discipline: Literature
Region: London, UK
MacDowell Fellowships: 1995, 1997

Joanna Briscoe had completed two children’s novels and one adult novel and collected dozens of publishers’ rejection letters in a scrapbook by the time she left school. Rebelling against an excessively rural childhood, she went to University College London to read English, and then lived in Bloomsbury, central London, for most of her adult life. On graduating, she got a job writing and editing on Girl About Town magazine, and went freelance after a year. She continued to write fiction in the evenings while earning money as a freelance journalist, largely for The Guardian and Elle. She has since written regular features, reviews, and columns for publications including the Guardian, Independent, Observer, Sunday Times, Times, Sunday Telegraph, Evening Standard, ES Magazine, Express, FT, Mail on Sunday, New Statesman, and Vogue. She writes a guest column, “At The Sharp End,” for the Independent, and is currently on contract with the Guardian as a literary critic. She also broadcasts on Radio 4, most frequently on “Woman’s Hour.” She published short stories in several anthologies, including Revenge (Virago) and Wild Ways (Sceptre). Her first novel, Mothers and Other Lovers, was published in 1994 and won a Betty Trask Award. She then spent a lot of time in New York researching her second novel, Skin, which was about the beauty industry and the mutilation of women’s bodies. She spent some time as a Fellow of MacDowell finishing the novel, which was a runner up for the Encore Award, and lived briefly in Paris, writing. She now lives with her partner and children in north London, where she continues to write at home. Sleep With Me, published by Bloomsbury in 2005 and in nine other countries, including the U.S., was widely reviewed and adapted for television by Andrew Davies for ITV Drama. Joanna's fourth novel, You, was published by Bloomsbury in July 2011.

Portrait by J Alden

Studios

MacDowell

Joanna Briscoe worked in the MacDowell studio.

Built in 1912, Pine Studio was renamed MacDowell Studio in 1943 in recognition of support from a group of Edward MacDowell’s music students. It was built as a composers’ studio and the stuccoed walls were intended to be soundproof. Like many of the studios on property, MacDowell was winterized in the 1950s when the program began welcoming…

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