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Mandy Sayer







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Mandy Sayer (born 1963) is an Australian novelist and narrative non-fiction writer.

She was born in 1963 in the Sydney suburb of Marrickville, the third of three children. She began writing poetry and stories at the age of six. Her parents separated when she was aged ten.[1] In 1983, she travelled to the United States with her father Gerry, a jazz drummer.[1] To earn a living, they busked on the streets of New York City, New Orleans and Colorado for three years; Gerry played drums and Mandy tap danced. Her first memoir, Dreamtime Alice (1998), was based on these experiences. It was published to acclaim in Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Brazil, and won the 2000 National Biography Award and Australian Audio Book of the Year.

In 1985 in New Orleans during Mardi Gras she met Yusef Komunyakaa, an African-American war poet (later to win a Pulitzer Prize). They discovered a mutual interest in jazz and the novels of Patrick White.[2] That year they married, and he became a professor at Indiana University, where she studied for an MA in English and Creative Writing.[2] and where she became a member of the Bill Evans Dance Company. She also studied narrative non-fiction writing with the celebrated author, Maxine Hong Kingston. During this time, she won the Vogel Award for her first novel, Mood Indigo (1990), which was followed by Blind Luck (1993), and The Cross (1995). Sayer and Komunyakaa divorced in 1995, after the birth of his child from a one-night stand he had with a former girlfriend. During their marriage, Sayer miscarried one child and terminated another pregnancy against Komyunakaa's wishes.[3] She discusses this in her third memoir, The Poet's Wife (2014), the writing of which was prompted by the 2003 murder-suicide of Komunyakaa’s subsequent partner, Reetika Vazirani, and their two-year-old son, Jehan.

On return to Australia, she gained a Doctorate from the University of Technology Sydney. In 1997, she was named one of Ten Best Young Australian Novelists by The Sydney Morning Herald. In 2003, she married novelist and playwright Louis Nowra, becoming his third wife. They had worked together when they co-edited the anthology In the Gutter ... Looking at the Stars in 2000. Shortly after their marriage Sayer wrote and published her second memoir, Velocity, about her unconventional and chaotic childhood, which won the South Australian Premier’s Award for Non-Fiction, and The Age Book of the Year for Non-Fiction. Sayer and Nowra have separate homes not far from each other near Kings Cross, in which their daytime writing activities are conducted, and they come together in the evening.[2][4]

Sayer’s poetry has been published in the Jazz Poetry Anthology, the Australian newspaper, and the Best Australian Poetry series. Between 2006 and 2016 she was a columnist for Sydney newspaper, The Wentworth Courier, and for two years penned a humorous column in The Australian. Her investigative journalism, reviews, and essays have appeared in The Monthly, The Good Weekend, Griffith Review, The Spectator, The Australian Weekend Magazine, Australian Geographic, the Sydney Morning Herald, and many other journals and magazines.

In 2009, Sayer was named the annual Scholar-in-Writing at the University of Technology, Sydney, and in February 2014, she and Nowra were named joint holders of the 2014 Copyright Agency Non-Fiction Writer-in-Residence at the University of Technology.

In 2021, she was the recipient of the Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship to complete her biography, Those Dashing McDonagh Sisters: Australia’s First Female Filmmaking Team.

Work

[edit]

Mandy Sayer's writings include:

Non-Fiction
Novels
Short story collections
Anthologies
[edit]
External videos
video icon One Plus One: Mandy Sayer, One Plus One, ABC News

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Yvonne Preston, "Tap-dancing to life's hard rhythm", Canberra Times, 7 February 1998, Panorama, p. 9
  • ^ a b c Jacqueline Maley, Sydney Morning Herald, 25 January 2014. "Two lives". Retrieved 19 May 2014
  • ^ Books Now: "Telling it like it was: Mandy Sayer's troubled memoir" Archived 2 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 19 May 2014
  • ^ Sydney Morning Herald, 24 July 2004. "Under the covers". Retrieved 19 May 2014
  • ^ "Mood Indigo". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. The University of Queensland. Retrieved 27 November 2023.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mandy_Sayer&oldid=1217991034"

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    This page was last edited on 9 April 2024, at 03:14 (UTC).

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