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Julia Darling

Born (1956-08-21)21 August 1956
Winchester, Hampshire, England
Died 13 April 2005(2005-04-13) (aged 48)
Newcastle upon Tyne, England
Occupation Playwright, Novelist, Poet, Short story writer
Nationality British
Period 1976–2005
Genre Fiction
Website
juliadarling.co.uk

Julia Rose Darling (21 August 1956 – 13 April 2005) was an award-winning English novelist, poet and dramatist.

Darling was born in 1956 in 8 College Street, Winchester—the house Jane Austen died in. Her parents were John Ramsay Darling, a science teacher at Winchester College and Patricia Rosemary, who was a nurse and a Quaker. Darling later wrote about how the house's Austen connection meant they were constantly visited. She later wrote that as a teenager, she had put up anti-apartheid and pro-choice posters in her bedroom windows earning her a complaint from the Jane Austen Society.

Darling went to school at Winchester High School for Girls and at St Christopher School. One of her friends at that time was the "groovy and alternative" Robyn Hitchcock, a pupil at Winchester College. She was expelled at 15 and attended Falmouth School of Art.

Darling moved to Newcastle in 1980 and began her writing career as a poet, publishing a collection entitled Small Beauties in 1988 and working with a performance group called "The Poetry Virgins".

In 1995 she published a book of short stories, Bloodlines with Panurge Press, and many of these stories were broadcast on BBC Radio 4. In 1998 her first novel, Crocodile Soup, was published by Anchor at Transworld. The novel went on to be published in Canada, Australia, Europe and the United States and was long-listed for the Orange Prize. Her second novel, The Taxi Driver's Daughter, was published by Penguin and long-listed for the Main Booker Prize and short-listed for the Encore Award. She wrote many plays for stage and radio.

In 2003, Darling's first full-length collection of poems, Sudden Collapses in Public Places, was published by Arc and was awarded a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. She worked on a number of arts and health projects, including work with elderly people in residential homes for Equal Arts, and she ran drama workshops for doctors and patients with the project "Operating Theatre". She was a fellow of Literature and Health in the English School at Newcastle University and was a recipient of the prestigious Northern Rock Foundation Writer's Award, the largest annual literary award in England.


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