Wendy Perriam


Wendy Perriam is a British novelist and graduate of St Anne's College, Oxford, who started writing at the age of five and wrote her first novel at eleven. Perriam then went silent as she struggled through a long period of depression and physical illness, having been expelled from her Catholic school for heresy and told she was in Satan's power. Many of her early novels explore the perils and, conversely, the great attractions of Catholicism. Perriam's work is also renowned for its explicit sexual content.
In 2002, she won the Literary Review's Bad Sex Award for Tread softly.
Perriam has appeared frequently on television and radio, and was once a regular contributor to the radio series Stop the Week and Fourth Column. She has also written for a wide variety of newspapers and magazines, and appeared at many leading Literary Festivals. Her work has been critically acclaimed for its psychological insight and for its power to disturb as well as divert. She was described by the Sunday Telegraph as "one of the most interesting unsung novelists of her generation" and by the Herald Tribune as "one of the finest and funniest writers to emerge in England since Kingsley Amis.",
Her 16th novel, Broken Places , published in paperback in 2012, was shortlisted for 2011 'Mind Book of the Year' award. In January 2013, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate for her "outstanding contribution to literature and reading pleasure", by Kingston University, which houses her considerable Archive.
Her latest collection of short stories, Bad Mothers Brilliant Lovers, was published in January 2015, and her most recent novel, Sing for Life, in November 2019.

Personal life

Perriam has been twice married and has two stepchildren. Her own daughter - and only child, after two miscarriages - died of cancer in 2008. Perriam lives in London.

Publications

; Novels
;
; Short Story Collections