Recently I’ve been a busy bunny,
hence the tardy update of the web site. Sorry about that. When I
haven’t
been working or having babies I’ve been watching
DVDs and eating toast and wishing I could sleep for longer than four
hours at a stretch.
Anyway, here’s an updated biog of what
I’ve been
up to:
Denise Mina was born in Glasgow in 1966. Because of
her father's job as an engineer, the family followed the north sea
oil boom of
the seventies
around Europe, moving twenty one times in eighteen years from Paris
to the Hague, London, Scotland and Bergen. She left school at sixteen
and did a number of poorly paid jobs: working in a meat factory,
bar maid, kitchen porter and cook. Eventually she settle in auxiliary
nursing
for geriatric and terminal care patients.
At twenty one she passed
exams, got into study Law at Glasgow University and went on to
research a PhD thesis at Strathclyde University
on the ascription of mental illness to female offenders, teaching
criminology
and criminal law in the mean time.
Misusing her grant she stayed at home and wrote a novel, 'Garnethill'
when she was supposed to be studying instead.
'Garnethill' won
the Crime Writers' Association John Creasy Dagger for the best
first crime novel and was the start of a trilogy
completed by 'Exile' and 'Resolution'.
A fourth novel followed,
a stand alone, named 'Sanctum' in the UK and 'Deception' in the
US.
In 2005 'The Field of Blood' was published, the first of a series
of five books following the career and life of journalist Paddy
Meehan from the newsrooms of the early 1980s, through the momentous
events
of the nineteen nineties. The second in the series was published
in
2006, ‘The Dead Hour’ and the third will follow
in 2007.
She also writes comics and wrote ‘Hellblazer’,
the John Constantine series for Vertigo, for a year, published
soon as graphic
novels called ‘Empathy is the Enemy’ and ‘The
Red Right Hand’. She has also written a one-off graphic
novel about spree killing and property prices called ‘A
Sickness in the Family’ (DC
Comics forthcoming).
In 2006 she wrote her first play, “Ida
Tamson” an adaptation
of a short story which was serialised in the Evening Times
over five nights. The play was part of the Oran Mor ‘A
Play, a Pie and a Pint’ series, starred Elaine C. Smith
and was, frankly, rather super.
As well as all of this she writes short stories published various
collections, stories for BBC Radio 4, contributes to TV and
radio as a big red face
at the corner of the sofa who interjects occasionally, is writing
a film adaptation of Ida Tamson and has a number of other projects
on
the go.
How does she do it all? Well, her personal grooming is shameful,
her house is filthy and her children run wild in the fields.
She found
a mushroom in the shower the other day. What sort of woman
is that?
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