Susanna Clarke

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Susanna Clarke

Clarke in March 2006.
Born November 1, 1959 (1959-11-01) (age 48)
Nottingham, England
Occupation Novelist, short story writer
Nationality
English
Writing period 1996—Present
Genres Alternate history, Fantasy
Literary movement Magical Realism
Debut works Debut short story: "The Ladies of Grace Adieu" (1996)
Debut novel: Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (2004)
Influences Jane Austen, G. K. Chesterton, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, Neil Gaiman, C. S. Lewis, Ursula Le Guin, Alan Moore, Joss Whedon
Website jonathanstrange.com

Susanna [Mary] Clarke (born November 1, 1959) is a British author best known for her debut novel Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (2004), a Hugo Award-winning alternate history fantasy.

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Susanna [Mary] Clarke was born November 1, 1959 in Nottingham, England.[1] She was the eldest daughter of a Methodist Minister and spent her childhood in various towns across Northern England and Scotland.[2] She attended St Hilda's College, Oxford, graduating in 1981 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. In the following eight years she worked in publishing at Quarto and Gordon Fraser, then in 1990 she went abroad for two years, teaching English as a foreign language in Turin, Italy and Bilbao, Spain.[1]

In 1992 she returned to England, having departed from teaching, and spent the remainder of the year in County Durham.[2] Early the following year she compiled her notes for what would be Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell and attempted to write the novel. Clarke realized that a more formal education in fiction writing might be an asset and thus applied to the Arvon Foundation, a charity for writers in Britain, wherein the student would receive an intensified education during a four- or five-day course with two tutors. After investigating several of the fantasy-oriented course offerings, Clarke opted for the one mentored by Colin Greenland and Geoff Ryman since they were on the literary end of fantasy. Greenland sent one of Clarke's stories from the course, "The Ladies of Grace Adieu," to Neil Gaiman, who in turn shared it with Patrick Nielsen Hayden. Hayden bought Clarke's tale for publication in his Starlight 1 (1996) anthology.[1]

In the following decade, Clarke was employed as an editor of cookbooks at Simon & Schuster's Cambridge office.[1] During this time, she published seven short stories and novellas in US anthologies. One, "The Duke of Wellington Misplaces His Horse" (1999), first appeared in a limited-edition, illustrated chapbook from Green Man Press. Another, "Mr Simonelli, or The Fairy Widower," was shortlisted for a World Fantasy Award in 2001.[2] Many of Clarke's short tales relate to the world of her first novel, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell.[1]

In 1993, while she still resided in County Durham in a house that over-looked the North Sea, she began writing her first novel, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, which was completed a decade later and published by Bloomsbury in October 2004.[2] The novel was not a small undertaking, being 800 pages in length and requiring of Clarke a great deal of time researching the history of early 19th-Century London.[3]

I wanted to explore my ideas of the fantastic, as well as my ideas of England and my attachment to English landscape. From an English person's point of view, you look across at America and you get the impression there is a sort of fable, a myth of America: an ideal of what America really is. Sometimes it feels to me as though we don't have a fable of England, of Britain, something strong and idealized and romantic.

—Susanna Clarke, "The Three Susanna Clarkes," Locus, April 2005, page 56.

The finished product, an alternate history fantasy regarding two magicians, was filled with historical detail and copious footnotes that embellished the world.[3]

Clarke resides in Cambridge with her partner, the science fiction novelist and reviewer Colin Greenland, with whom she has lived since 1996.[2] She is working on a new book that begins a few years after the closing events of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. This new work will focus on different characters, as Ms. Clarke has become interested in people basically a bit lower down the social scale (possibly meaning Childermass and Vinculus) and less intrigued by the rich and famous.[3]

  • The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories (2006)
    • "The Ladies of Grace Adieu" (1996)
    • "On Lickerish Hill" (1997)
    • "Mrs Mabb" (1998)
    • "The Duke of Wellington Misplaces His Horse" (1999)
    • "Mr Simonelli, or the Fairy Widower" (2000)
    • "Tom Brightwind, or How the Fairy Bridge was Built at Thoresby" (2001)
    • "Antickes and Frets" (2004)
    • "John Uskglass and the Cumbrian Charcoal Burner"

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