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Sarah Hall

Sarah Hall has gained a reputation as one of British writing’s great wild voices. At a time when literature celebrating the natural world has become increasingly fashionable, Hall’s works serve as a reminder of the darker side of writing the pastoral.

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Sarah Hall (Getty)

About the author

Born in Cumbria in 1974, after studying at universities in Aberystwyth and St Andrews, Sarah Hall began her writing career as a poet published in several magazines. And her work demonstrates the poet’s attention to the sensual qualities of language.

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Her first novel Haweswater in 2002 charts the disintegration of a community of farmers in Cumbria when their region is earmarked as the location for a new reservoir. The novel introduces a range of ingredients that will return throughout her oeuvre: the atavistic lure of the natural world, the unknowable female protagonist, the setting of the north of England and the tension between progress and tradition. It won the Commonwealth Writers Prize in 2003.

She describes her more experimental second novel The Electric Michelangelo as “an act of exuberance”. Hall says: “I was thrilled to find that I was allowed to be a writer, so I threw everything at it: language, rhyming sentences, non-existent plot.”

Set against the backdrop of bohemian seaside communities in Morecambe and Coney Island and with a richly vibrant tone, it moved the author into new territory and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize.

In 2007 she published her third novel The Carhullan Army which is a more streamlined, sleek piece of storytelling and a return the geography her native Cumbria, but the familiarity ends there in this eerie post-apocalyptic novel of tribal warfare and collective living. It is her first novel to use a first person narrator.

As well as being a successful novelist, Hall’s short stories have garnered distinctions from many quarters. ±«Óãtv listeners will know her as a regular highlight of the ±«Óãtv National Short Story Award, for which her story Butchers Perfume was shortlisted in 2012. On Radio 4 Val Mcdermid commented: “When you listen to something like that, there's no doubting the power of fiction to get to the grim heart of things.”

Hall went on to win the award in 2013 with her darkly erotic tale Mrs Fox, described by Chair of judges Mariella Frostrup as “utterly unique”.

Her 2015 novel The Wolf Border investigates the fundamental nature of wilderness and wildness, both animal and human. It seeks to understand the most obsessive aspects of humanity: sex, love, and conflict; the desire to find answers to the question of our existence.

Hall tutors at the Faber Academy and is an honorary fellow of Aberystwyth University. She lives in Norwich.

Simon Richardson, ±«Óãtv Readings Unit