“The act of writing surprises me all the time. A miraculous thing happens when you have an idea and you want to convert it into words... and then you start to create a work of art,and that's another miracle, and it remains mysterious to the writer, or to this writer anyway.” – Janette Turner Hospital
Born in Australia on this date in 1942, Turner Hospital has spent most of her adult life in either Canada or the U.S. “All my writing, in a sense, revolves around the mediation of one culture (or subculture) to another,” she said. Best known for her novels, she also is an accomplished and productive short story writer and has won numerous awards in both genres.
One of Turner Hospital's most accomplished novels is Borderline, set on the “borderline”of Canada and the U.S. While primarily a thriller, the story also focuses on where to draw the "borderline" between intrusions into others' lives and the responsibility for them.
Among her many awards are Canada’s Seal Award, the CDC Literary Prize, and the Australian National Book Council Award. Also a teacher of both literature and creative writing, she has been writer-in-residence at major universities in Australia, Canada, England and the U.S. and recently has been Visiting Writer-in-Residence at the University of South Carolina.
“The themes of
dislocation and connection are constant in my work,” she said. “So are
the themes of moral choice and moral courage. I am always putting my characters
into situations of acute moral dilemma . . . to find out what they will do.”
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