Catherine A. Merriman (born in 1949) is a British novelist, short-story writer and editor who has published five novels and three short-story collections. Her work often addresses the experiences of women. Her first novel, ''Leaving the Light On'' (1992), won the
Ruth Hadden Memorial Award; her other works include the novels ''Fatal Observations'' (1993) and ''State of Desire'' (1996); the short-story collections ''Silly Mothers'' (1991), shortlisted for the
Wales Book of the Year, and ''Getting a Life'' (2001); and the edited collection ''Laughing, Not Laughing: Women Writing on 'My Experience of Sex'' (2004), which won an
Erotic Award. Born in London, she has lived in Wales since 1973, and is often considered to be a Welsh author.
Biography
Catherine Merriman was born in 1949
[Notes on the authors. ''The Second Penguin Book of Welsh Short Stories'' (]Alun Richards
Alun Morgun Richards (27 October 1929 – 2 June 2004) was a Welsh novelist, best known for his novel '' Ennal's Point'', about the work of a lifeboat crew in South Wales.
Richards was born in King Edward Avenue, Caerphilly. He was educated at ...
, ed.), p. 400 (Penguin
Penguins (order (biology), order List of Sphenisciformes by population, Sphenisciformes , family (biology), family Spheniscidae ) are a group of Water bird, aquatic flightless birds. They live almost exclusively in the Southern Hemisphere: on ...
; 1994) in London, where she spent her childhood.
Her parents both worked in psychiatry and psychoanalysis. She attended the
University of Kent at Canterbury.
She moved to
Abergavenny
Abergavenny (; cy, Y Fenni , archaically ''Abergafenni'' meaning "mouth of the River Gavenny") is a market town and community in Monmouthshire, Wales. Abergavenny is promoted as a ''Gateway to Wales''; it is approximately from the border wi ...
with her husband in 1973, and has remained in
South East Wales;
in 1994 she was living in
Brynmawr
Brynmawr (; , ,) is a market town, community and electoral ward in Blaenau Gwent, Wales. The town, sometimes cited as the highest town in Wales, is situated at above sea level at the head of the South Wales Valleys. It grew with the devel ...
, Gwent.
She said in an interview in around 2000 that she considers herself both English and Welsh, commenting: "I think living in no man's land is quite a good place for a writer. You can see in both directions."
Before becoming a writer, she worked as a statistician and a Women's Studies lecturer, and spent eleven years as a volunteer for the charity
Women's Aid
Women's Aid Federation of England, commonly called Women's Aid within England, is one of a group of charities across the United Kingdom. There are four main Women's Aid Federations, one for each of the countries of the United Kingdom. Its aim is t ...
in Abergavenny.
She started writing in 1985, after leaving work to raise her two children.
[Sarah Gaines (6 April 1997). Just the WRITE place to live. '' Wales on Sunday'' pp. 48–49]
Merriman taught writing for ten years at the
University of Glamorgan (now part of the University of South Wales).
She is a fellow of the
Welsh Academy and co-chaired their members' committee. She has judged short-story competitions.
Writing
Merriman has published five novels and three short-story collections (as of 2008).
Her writing often addresses women's experiences. Diana Wallace classes her in a group of Welsh women fiction authors writing after 1968 whose work in some way tackles the "changes brought by feminism", together with
Glenda Beagan Glenda may refer to:
* Glenda (given name)
* Glenda (musician) (born 1988), Cuban singer, songwriter, and flute player
* Glenda, the Plan 9 Bunny, mascot of Plan 9 from Bell Labs
* Tropical Storm Glenda, various storms, including hurricanes and cy ...
,
Alice Thomas Ellis,
Siân James, Mary Jones,
Clare Morgan Clare may refer to:
Places Antarctica
* Clare Range, a mountain range in Victoria Land
Australia
* Clare, South Australia, a town in the Clare Valley
* Clare Valley, South Australia
Canada
* Clare (electoral district), an electoral district
* Cl ...
and
Bernice Rubens. Merriman was one of seven Welsh women authors to be included in Linden Peach's 2007 book, ''Contemporary Irish and Welsh Women's Fiction: Gender, Desire and Power'';
Jane Aaron
Jane Frances Aaron (April 16, 1948 – June 27, 2015) was an American filmmaker and children's book illustrator, best known for her work on '' Between the Lions'' and ''Sesame Street''. Aaron mixed live-action shots and animated images to tea ...
(2008). ''Review: ''Contemporary Irish and Welsh Women's Fiction: Gender, Desire and Power.'' Linden Peach. 2007. Writing Wales in English series. University of Wales Press''. '' Contemporary Women's Writing'' 2 (2): 183–84 Peach comments that "her career as a writer is inseparable from Wales".
[Linden Peach. ''Contemporary Irish and Welsh Women's Fiction: Gender, Desire and Power'' (Writing Wales in English series), p. 144 ( University of Wales Press; 2020) ]
Novels
''Leaving the Light On'' won the
Ruth Hadden Memorial Award for first novels in 1992.
Merriman states that it focuses on domestic power and has its foundation in her experience volunteering for the charity
Women's Aid
Women's Aid Federation of England, commonly called Women's Aid within England, is one of a group of charities across the United Kingdom. There are four main Women's Aid Federations, one for each of the countries of the United Kingdom. Its aim is t ...
.
Lucasta Miller
Lucasta Frances Elizabeth Miller (born 5 June 1966) is an English writer and literary journalist.
Education
Miller was educated at Westminster School and Lady Margaret Hall, in Oxford, receiving a congratulatory first in English in 1988. She was ...
, in a review for ''
The Times'', praises the novel's "tact and sensitivity" in handling a "sad, convincing" plot. A later review for the same newspaper describes it as an "observant first novel", whose "sinister" atmosphere is enhanced by its "determinedly unromantic" seaside setting. Max Davidson, in a short review of the paperback edition for ''
The Daily Telegraph'', describes it as "One of the strongest first novels of recent years". David Robson, in a mixed review for ''
The Sunday Telegraph'', calls the novel a "highly assured début" which is "sharply observed"; he praises the beginning, but notes that the symmetrical set-up slows down the plot, leading to "too much navel-watching and not enough action."
In her second novel, ''Fatal Observations'' – which she has said also stems from her Women's Aid experience – Merriman tackles the subject of domestic violence.
Peter Matthews, writing in ''
The Observer'', describes the novel as a "simple and sometimes simplistic" portrayal of urban violence, but within its limited perspective, "uncannily exact in conveying that mixture of fear, rage, nausea and shame that every embattled city-dweller feels". Robin Blake, in a broadly positive short review of the novel in ''
The Independent'', criticises the "too in-your-face...character analysis". A review for ''The Times'' characterises the theme as the relationship between the sexes, describing the story as evolving from "sharply funny" to an ending that is "very nasty indeed".
The protagonist of ''State of Desire'', her third novel, is recently bereaved widow from South Wales who protests about
opencast mining and has an affair with a much-younger man. The novel addresses reawakening sexuality after bereavement and also tackles environmental issues.
Helen Dunmore, in a review for ''The Times'', writes that "Merriman creates an atmosphere of risk-taking sexuality and of desire without an ounce of romance in it." She praises the novel's depiction of the Welsh scenery "without sentimentality or caricature", noting parallels between the widowed protagonist's changed life and the threat that mining poses to the landscape.
[ Helen Dunmore (2 March 1996). How scarred is my Welsh valley. '' The Times'' (65517) p. 63] Davidson, in a short review for ''The Telegraph'', praises the novel's "crisp writing, sharp dialogue and shrewd characterisation", and describes parts as having "real pathos". The academic
Jane Aaron
Jane Frances Aaron (April 16, 1948 – June 27, 2015) was an American filmmaker and children's book illustrator, best known for her work on '' Between the Lions'' and ''Sesame Street''. Aaron mixed live-action shots and animated images to tea ...
comments that the novel depicts a woman appealing to "traditional Welsh values of community and respect for nature" to fight for modern environmental causes.
Stephen Knight assesses ''State of Desire'' within the tradition of
industrial novels; he comments that it envisages a "modern world where women can resist modern industrial blight" and that the "commitment and resistance of the industrial novel can continue in the present."
[ Stephen Knight. "Industrial Fiction". In ''The Cambridge History of Welsh Literature'' (Geraint Evans, Helen Fulton, eds), p. 401 ( Cambridge University Press; 2019) ] ''State of Desire'' has also been noted as an early example of a Welsh novel that features a minor character who is lesbian.
Her next novel, ''Broken Glass'', depicts a relationship disrupted by the diagnosis of cancer. A review in the ''
Liverpool Echo'' describes it as "
rrowing and heartening by turns".
Short stories
Merriman's first collection of stories, ''Silly Mothers'', was shortlisted for 1992
Wales Book of the Year,
and her short fiction has twice won a Rhys Davies short-story award, in 1991 and 1998. Her stories have appeared in anthologies, including ''The Second Penguin Book of Welsh Short Stories'' (1994)
and the
Library of Wales' ''Story II'' (2014), and many have been broadcast on
BBC Radio 4.
[List of Writers: Merriman, Catherine]
The Academi
Literature Wales is the Welsh national literature promotion agency and society of writers, existing to promote Welsh-language and English-language literature in Wales. It offers bursaries for writing projects, runs literary events and lectures ...
(archived 2 May 2009)
Linden Peach includes Merriman in a list of twenty-two "key" 20th-century women writers of short fiction in English. Her short-story collections, together with those of the other Welsh authors
Leonora Brito
Leonora Brito (7 July 1954 – 14 June 2007) was a Welsh writer from Cardiff, Wales.
Biography
Brito was born in Cardiff on 7 July 1954. She studied Law and History at Cardiff University. In 1991 she won the Rhys Davies Short Story Prize. He ...
,
Clare Morgan Clare may refer to:
Places Antarctica
* Clare Range, a mountain range in Victoria Land
Australia
* Clare, South Australia, a town in the Clare Valley
* Clare Valley, South Australia
Canada
* Clare (electoral district), an electoral district
* Cl ...
,
Siân James and
Glenda Beagan Glenda may refer to:
* Glenda (given name)
* Glenda (musician) (born 1988), Cuban singer, songwriter, and flute player
* Glenda, the Plan 9 Bunny, mascot of Plan 9 from Bell Labs
* Tropical Storm Glenda, various storms, including hurricanes and cy ...
, have been described by Michelle Deininger as having "changed the direction of the form further, exploring issues such as race, female identity, ageing, and Welsh-language learning." Jude Brigley suggests her collection "Silly Mothers" as a text for teaching
creative writing.
Peach analyses her short stories and particularly her third collection, ''Getting a Life'' (2001), in the context of a
trope he terms the "blind spot", a "space of danger outside of what is normally in our field of vision", covering perceived threat or actual potential for violence ("Eating Sugar", "One Step Away from Trouble") as well as real violence ("Delivery"), and compares her with the Irish author,
Mary Morrissy
Mary Morrissy (born 25 January 1957) is an Irish novelist and short story writer. She writes on art, fiction, and history. Morrissy is an elected member of Aosdána, Ireland's academy of artists and writers.
Life
Morrissy was born in Dublin. A g ...
.
Malcolm Ballin characterises "Delivery" as a "characteristic example of south Wales ''noir''", describing the story as a "powerful piece that maintains suspense right to the end."
Andy Beckett describes "Barbecue", Merriman's contribution to the Penguin anthology, as "contemporary picaresque" and compares it with the work of the Scottish author,
Duncan McLean.
[ Andy Beckett (11 December 1994). Cultural snacks and Euro-pudding. '' The Independent'' p. 100] David Lloyd considers Merriman's "One Day" among the highlights of the anthology ''Mama's Baby (Papa's Maybe) & Other Stories: New Welsh Short Fiction'' (1999), commenting that its "language sparkles and delights".
Editor
For several years Merriman was the fiction editor of the ''
New Welsh Review''. She edited ''Laughing, Not Laughing: Women Writing on 'My Experience of Sex, an anthology of Welsh women writing frankly about their sexual experiences, which won the publications category of the 2004
Erotic Awards. Merriman said in an interview that "All I wanted was honesty, for women to try and express on paper their experiences of sex, good or bad" and that she was surprised at the range of stories she received, commenting that "A lot of women clearly feel very separate and alone in their sexual lives."
[Hannah Jones (29 March 2004). The fair sex. '' Western Mail'' p. 11]
Publications
Source:
Novels
*''Leaving the Light On'' (Weidenfield & Nicolson; 1992)
*''Fatal Observations'' (Weidenfield & Nicolson; 1993)
*''State of Desire'' (
Pan Macmillan; 1996)
*''Broken Glass'' (
Pan; 1998)
*''Brotherhood'' (
Parthian; 2003)
Short story collections
*''Silly Mothers '' (
Honno; 1991)
*''Of Sons and Stars'' (Honno; 1997)
*''Getting a Life'' (Honno; 2001)
Editor
*''Laughing, Not Laughing: Women Writing on 'My Experience of Sex (Honno; 2004)
References
Further reading
Criticism
*
M. Wynn Thomas
M. Wynn Thomas OBE FEA FLSW FBA is a Professor of English at Swansea University and holds the Emyr Humphreys Chair of Welsh Writing in English at Swansea University. His expertise is in American poetry and modern Welsh literature.
Career
Thom ...
(ed.). ''Welsh Writing in English'' (University of Wales Press; 2003)
Reviews
*Geraldine Brennan (8 November 1992). Seductive voices of Ireland past. ''
The Observer'' p. 61
'Leaving The Light On''*Deborah Singmaster (11 December 1992). A Share of Care – ''Leaving the Light On'' by Catherine Merriman. ''
The Times Literary Supplement'' (4680) p. 20
External links
University of Glamorgan: MPhil tutors
{{DEFAULTSORT:Merriman, Catherine
Living people
1949 births
20th-century English novelists
21st-century English novelists
English short story writers
Academics of the University of Glamorgan
20th-century British short story writers
21st-century British short story writers