Monica McInerney is a best-selling Australian-born, Dublin-based writer. In 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2019 McInerney was voted into the top ten of Booktopia's 'Australia's Favourite Novelist' poll. Her 13th novel, 'The Godmothers', was released in 2020. Her first children's book 'Marcie Gill and the Caravan Park Cat' was published in 2021. Her books have been published worldwide and in more than a dozen languages.
Life
editMcInerney grew up in a family of seven children in the Clare Valley wine region of South Australia, where her father was the railway stationmaster and her mother worked in the local library. Since then Monica has lived in several Australian cities, and in Ireland and London.
A book publicist for ten years, McInerney has also worked on events such as the Dublin International Writers' Festival. She has previously worked as an event manager and organiser of tourism festivals, a freelance writer/editor, a record company press officer, a barmaid, grape picker and hotel cleaner; and in arts marketing, public relations and television production roles.
For more than 30 years, McInerney and her Irish husband have been moving back and forth between Australia and Ireland. They currently live in Dublin.[1]
In November 2022, a sculpture of McInerney was unveiled opposite her childhood home in Clare. The work, by South Australian sculptor Paul Leditschke, depicts McInerney as a 10-year-old girl reading a book on the rooftop of her family home. It was erected by the Riesling Trail Committee which manages a 35km walking and cycling track that runs through the Clare Valley.[2]
Fiction writing
editIn her first novel, A Taste for It (2001), McInerney tracks the travels of an Australian chef, Maura Carmody, as she bungles her way around Ireland. The book established themes of romance, dislocation and adventure that McInerney would expand upon for years to come.
Between 2002 and 2005 McInerney produced four novels – Upside Down Inside Out (2002), Spin the Bottle (2003), Alphabet Sisters (2004) and Family Baggage (2005) – which also traversed themes of romance, travel and family dynamics, to increasingly positive reviews. In a 2004 review of Alphabet Sisters, The Age newspaper's Christopher Bantick wrote that McInerney's departure from romantic comedy allowed for a sharpened "exploration of contemporary women and their relationships."[3] Of Family Baggage, Marie Claire magazine wrote: "With every book, Monica McInerney becomes more skilled at juggling plot complexities and giving depth to her characters…"[4]
In 2006, McInerney was the main ambassador for the Australian Government's 'Books Alive' national reading campaign, for which she wrote a limited edition novella called Odd One Out. McInerney's sixth novel, Those Faraday Girls (2007), won General Fiction Book of the Year at the Australian Book Industry Awards.[5] In a review of the book, Sydney's Sun Herald newspaper described McInerney as: "Australia’s answer to Maeve Binchy, a modern-day Jane Austen."[6] More success followed that of Those Faraday Girls, with several of McInerney's subsequent novels being shortlisted for major writing awards in Australia and Ireland.
McInerney's 2008 collection of short stories, All Together Now, was shortlisted for General Fiction Book of the Year in the 2009 Australian Book Industry Awards. Hobart's Mercury newspaper described the collection as: "stories that will edify and bring a tear to the eye as well. Yes, this can be from laughter at McInerney’s sense of fun and playfulness, but also in the tender observations she makes of the frailty of love and life."[7]
For her next novel, 2010's At Home with the Templetons, McInerney expanded on the exploration of family dynamics, broadening the scope of the interactions to those amongst two families. In an interview with Fancy Goods she explained: "What I wanted to do with this novel was bring two very different families – the seven unruly Templetons and the smaller unit of Nina Donovan and her son Tom – into each other’s orbit, with good and bad consequences. I also wanted to touch on issues such as jealousy in its many and damaging forms, the lasting impact of grief, the different aspects of motherhood and marriage, sibling rivalry and sibling loyalty, contrasting parenting styles, family secrets and lies, all against a background as rich in comedy and drama as possible."[8] Her 2011 release, Lola's Secret – "A funny, sad and moving novel about memories and moments and the very meaning of life"[9] – was shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year in 2012 and is now available as a Pink Popular Penguin,[10] raising funds to place breast-care nurses in rural Australia.
In 2012's The House of Memories, McInerney explores the reverberations of grief after the death of a child, calling on the despair she'd experienced at the loss of her own father. In an interview in 2012, McInerney explained: "Grief is the rawest of human emotions and it is different for everybody who goes through it. Once I opened myself to thinking about that, it seemed to be everywhere. I've been really bowled over by the emails I've been getting from readers; so many people have been through something like this."[11] McInerney published two short stories as an eBook titled The Christmas Gift in 2013 and released her 11th major work, Hello from the Gillespies, in October 2014, which is described as "A funny and heartfelt novel about miscommunication and mayhem in a family like no other."[12] Hello from the Gillespies was included on Oprah Winfrey's "Three Books to Take on a Flight" list,[13] as well as Booktopia's 2014 Books of the Year[14] and Australia's Favourite Author polls, and the Huffington Post's 2015 Top 10 Novels to Read this Winter list.[15]
In her 2017 novel, The Trip of a Lifetime, McInerney reacquaints readers with the Quinlan family, previously featured in The Alphabet Sisters and Lola's Secret. This time, the family's wilful and eccentric matriarch, Lola, takes her granddaughter and great-granddaughter to visit her Irish homeland. But as the journey unfolds, Lola must confront the reasons she left Ireland, and the real motivations for her return. The Trip of a Lifetime went straight to Number 1 in Australia in July 2017 and was a Top 10 bestseller in Ireland. It was shortlisted for the General Fiction Book of the Year in the 2018 Australian Book Industry Awards.
Published works
edit- A Taste for It (2000)
- Upside Down Inside Out (2002)
- Spin the Bottle (2003)
- Alphabet Sisters (2004)
- Family Baggage (2005)
- Odd One Out (2006)
- Those Faraday Girls (2007)
- All Together Now (2008)
- At Home with the Templetons (2010)
- Lola's Secret 2011
- The House of Memories (2012)
- The Christmas Gift (eBook novella) (2013)
- Hello from the Gillespies (2014)
- The Trip of a Lifetime (2017)
- The Godmothers (2020)
- Marcie Gill and the Caravan Park Cat (2021)
Awards and nominations
edit- 2008 – Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for Those Faraday Girls[16]
- 2009 – Shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for All Together Now[17]
- 2010 – Shortlisted for the Irish Book Awards, Popular Fiction for At Home with the Templetons[18]
- 2011 – Shortlisted for the Romantic Book of the Year Award for At Home with the Templetons[19]
- 2011 – Shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for At Home with the Templetons[20]
- 2012 – Shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for Lola's Secret[21]
- 2018 – Shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for The Trip of a Lifetime.
- 2021 – Shortlisted for the Australian Book Industry Awards, General Fiction Book of the Year for The Godmothers[22]
References
edit- ^ McInerney, Monica. "Bio". monicamcinerney.com. Monica McInerney. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
- ^ "Bestselling Australian author's childhood immortalised in stunning statue". ABC News. 11 November 2022. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
- ^ The Age. "Alphabet Sisters". theage.com.au. The Age. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Marie Claire. "Family Baggage review". monicamcinerney.com. Monica McInerney. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ ABIA. "ABIA History". abiawards.com.au. ABIA. Archived from the original on 31 July 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
- ^ McInerney, Monica. "Reviews". monicamcinerney.com. Monica McInerney. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Mercury. "All Together Now review". monicamcinerney.com. Monica McInerney. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Fancy Goods. "Monica McInerney on 'At Home with the Templetons'". fancygoods.com.au. Fancy Goods. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Penguin Books. "Lola's Secret". penguin.com.au. Penguin Books. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Penguin Books. "Pink Popular Penguins". penguin.com.au. Penguin Books. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Sydney Morning Herald. "Grief, for lack of a better word, is good". smh.com.au. Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Penguin Books. "Hello from the Gillespies blurb". penguin.com.au. Penguin Books. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Winfrey, Oprah. "Three Books to Take on a Flight". oprah.com. www.oprah.com/. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
- ^ Booktopia. "Booktopia's 2014 Books of the Year". blog.booktopia.com.au. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
- ^ Post, Huffington. "Top 10 Novels to Read This Winter". huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
- ^ Penguin Books. "Monica McInerney Awards". penguin.com.au. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
- ^ Readings. "ABIA nominations 2009". readings.com.au. Readings. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
- ^ PanMacMillan. "Monica McInerney". panmacmillan.com. PanMacmillan. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ^ Ruby Awards. "Shortlisted". romanceaustralia.com. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
- ^ AusLit. "ABIA Nominations 2011". austlit.edu.au. AusLit. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
- ^ Australian Financial Review. "ABIA 2012 Shortlist Revealed". afr.com. Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
- ^ "ABIA 2021 shortlists announced". Books+Publishing. 12 April 2021. Retrieved 12 April 2021.