Rosie Scott



Rosie Scott (born 1948) is a New Zealand novelist based in Sydney.

Early life and career
Rosie Scott was born in Wellington, New Zealand in 1948. Her father, Dick Scott, is a notable historian and journalist. She completed a BA and Graduate Diploma of Drama at Auckland University, and an MA(Hons) in English at Victoria University of Wellington. Scott worked in a variety of careers, including as a social worker and in publishing, before becoming a full-time writer.

Work
Scott's first published work was a 1984 volume of poetry Flesh and Blood, followed by the play Say Thank You to the Lady, for which she won the prestigious Bruce Mason Award in 1986. In 1988, at the age of 40, Scott published her first novel, Glory Days. It was shortlisted for the New Zealand Book Awards, and was published in New Zealand, Australia, the UK and the US. Since then, Scott has published five more novels, a short story collection and a collection of essays. She has stated that she likes to write about "the kind of things nobody else talks about and a lot of people would avoid."

Scott has been active in the Australian writing community in her work for Sydney PEN and the Australian Society of Authors (ASA). Scott served on the board and the executive of the ASA for ten years, during which time she was elected Chair. In 2005, she was appointed to a permanent honorary position on the ASA Council. She served as the Vice President of Sydney PEN, and was awarded the inaugural Sydney PEN Award in 2006.

Scott has campaigned extensively on human rights issues in Australia, saying, "My writing is fuelled by me as a totality, but also by my political feelings." With Tom Keneally, she co-edited an anthology of refugee writing, Another Country, for which she was nominated for the 2004 Human Rights Medal. She was a co-founder of Women for Wik, a group dedicated to reconciliation with Aboriginal people in Australia.

Scott completed a Diploma in Counselling and a Doctorate at the University of Western Sydney. She currently teaches creative writing at the University of Technology Sydney, as well as working as a mentor for young and novice writers.

Critical response
Scott has been called a "significant voice in contemporary women's fiction" in Australia. Marilyn Stasio, reviewing Glory Days in the New York Times Book Review, described Scott's writing as "an introspective voice that's rich in poetry and raw with anguish". Faith Singer was chosen for the Orange Prize's 50 Essential Reads by Contemporary Writers in 2004. Her work has been shortlisted for the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, the Banjo Patterson Award, the New Zealand Book Awards and the Biennial Adelaide Festival Award.

Personal life
Scott is married to theoretical biologist Danny Vendramini. They have two adult daughters, Josie Vendramini and the writer Bella Vendramini. They live in Sydney's inner west.

Novels

 * Glory Days (1988)
 * Nights with Grace (1990)
 * Feral City (1992)
 * Lives on Fire (1993)
 * Movie Dreams (1995)
 * Faith Singer (2003)

Short story collections

 * Queen of Love (1989)

Poetry

 * Flesh and Blood (1984)

Plays

 * Say Thank You to the Lady (1985)

Non-fiction

 * The Red Heart (1999)

Editor

 * Another Country (2004) (with Thomas Keneally)

In 213 Scott co-edited another anthology on asylum seekers with Tom Keneally called A Country Too Far with some of Australia's greatest writers including Anna Funder, Geraldine Brooks, Rodney Hall, Christos Tsiolkas, Les Murray, Alex Miller and Kim Scott. It was described as a 'stunning anthology and searing moral work… timely, important and wise.'