| Columbia Encyclopedia: Shirley Hazzard |
| Works: Works by Shirley Hazzard |
| 1967 | People in Glass Houses. Hazzard's collection of interrelated stories wittily describe an unnamed organization that is clearly the United Nations. Hazzard was born in Australia and settled in the United States after working for the United Nations in New York City. |
| 1980 | The Transit of Venus. Hazzard gains her greatest critical and popular success for this novel, about Australian sisters who immigrate to England and America. As one reviewer notes, "Character and circumstance unite to illumine the irony that one may be not only redeemed but also destroyed by the truth". |
| Quotes By: Shirley Hazzard |
Quotes:
"One would always want to think of oneself as being on the side of love, ready to recognize it and wish it well --but, when confronted with it in others, one so often resented it, questioned its true nature, secretly dismissed the particular instance as folly or promiscuity. Was it merely jealousy, or a reluctance to admit so noble and enviable a sentiment in anyone but oneself?"
"Children seldom have a proper sense of their own tragedy, discounting and keeping hidden the true horrors of their short lives, humbly imagining real calamity to be some prestigious drama of the grown-up world."
| Wikipedia: Shirley Hazzard |
Shirley Hazzard (born 30 January 1931) is an author of fiction and non-fiction. She was born in Australia, but holds citizenship in Great Britain and in the United States[1].
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Hazzard was born in Sydney, Australia, and attended Queenwood School for Girls in Mosman, but left in 1947 to travel through Southeast Asia with her parents. Her first landing was Hiroshima.[2] Her diplomat father took her to Hong Kong, and then she was "brutally removed by destiny"[3] to New Zealand where her father was Australian Trade Commissioner. Hazzard says of her experience of the East that "I began to feel that people could enjoy life, should enjoy life".[3]
Hazzard's early life "was a carbon copy of Helen Driscoll's" (the heroine of The Great Fire). Helen and her brother, the dying Benedict, are described as "wonderfully well-read, a poetic pair who live in literature."[2] Poetry, she says, has always been the centre of her life.
She travelled to Italy in 1956, and worked for a year in Naples.
In 1963, Hazzard married the writer Francis Steegmuller, who died in 1994. As of 2006, she lives in New York City, frequently traveling to her Italian residence in Capri.
Hazzard is best known as the author of four novels and two collections of short fiction, a body of fiction as distinguished as it is small. Her first book, the story collection Cliffs of Fall, was published in 1963. In 1977 her short story "A Long Story Short", originally published in The New Yorker on July 26, 1976, received an O. Henry Award.
The Transit of Venus, her third novel, won the 1980 National Book Critics Circle Award[4]. Her next novel, The Great Fire, which took her twenty years to write, garnered the 2003 National Book Award and the 2004 Miles Franklin Award. It was also shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction, longlisted for the 2004 Man Booker Prize, and named a 2003 Book of the Year by The Economist[5].
In addition to her fiction, Hazzard has written two books critical of the United Nations—Defeat of an Ideal (1973) and Countenance of Truth (1990)—and an account of her friendship with Graham Greene, Greene on Capri: A Memoir (2000). Her most recent work of non-fiction, The Ancient Shore: Dispatches from Naples (2008) is a collection of Hazzard’s writings on Naples, Italy, co-authored by her late husband, Francis Steegmuller.
In 1984 the Australian Broadcasting Corporation invited Hazzard to give the Boyer Lectures, a series of radio talks delivered each year by a prominent Australian. The talks were published the following year under the title Coming of Age in Australia.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Transit of Venus (disambiguation) | |
| The Great Fire (novel) | |
| William Dean Howells Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters |
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| Where did Laverne and Shirley move to for the sixth season of their show Shirley? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more | |
![]() | Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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