Alison Croggon

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Template:Short description Template:Use Australian English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Alison Croggon (born 1962) is a contemporary Australian poet, playwright, fantasy novelist, and librettist.[1]

Life and career

Born in the Transvaal, South Africa, Alison Croggon's family moved to England before settling in Australia, first in Ballarat then Melbourne.[2] She has worked as a journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald. Her first volume of poetry, This is the Stone, won the Anne Elder Award and the Mary Gilmore Prize.[3] Her novella Navigatio was highly commended in the 1995 The Australian/Vogel Literary Award.[4] Four novels of the fantasy genre series Pellinor have been published. She also founded and edits the online writing magazine Masthead[5] and writes theatre criticism.[6]

Croggon has also written libretti for Michael Smetanin's operas Gauguin: A Synthetic Life and The Burrow, which premiered respectively at the 2000 Melbourne Festival and Perth Festival, produced by ChamberMade.[7][8] In 2014, Iain Grandage (composer) and Croggon (librettist) collaborated to present The Riders, based on Tim Winton's novel The Riders. Its world premiere was in Melbourne.[9]

Other poems by Croggon have been set to music by Smetanin, Christine McCombe, Margaret Legge-Wilkinson, and Andrée Greenwell.[10] Her plays have been produced by the Melbourne Festival, The Red Shed Company (Adelaide) and ABC Radio.

As of 2023, she is arts editor at The Saturday Paper.[11]

She currently lives in Melbourne, Australia with her husband Daniel Keene and three children.[12]

Awards and nominations

  • 2009 Pascall Prize for Critical Writing for her blog Theatre Notes.[1]
  • 2023 shortlisted for NSW Premier's Translation Prize for Duino Elegies.[13]

Works

Poetry

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Memoir

Novella

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Fantasy novels

The Books of Pellinor

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Standalone

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Libretti

  • (1995) The Burrow, Template:ISBN
  • (2000) Gauguin (a synthetic life)
  • (2014) The Riders

Plays

  • Monologues for an Apocalypse (2000)
  • Blue (2001)
  • My Dearworthy Darling (2019)

References

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External links

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