Chris Dolan

Chris Dolan
Born 1957
Glasgow, Scotland
Occupation Novelist
Nationality Scottish

Chris Dolan (born 1957) is an award-winning novelist, poet and playwright writes. He has written regularly for stage, page, screen, and radio.[1]
.

Early life

Born in Glasgow, after being Scottish Co-ordinator of Community Service Volunteers and International Consultant for UNESCO, Chris Dolan in 1992 dedicated himself to writing full-time.

Career

Chris Dolan has published four novels, (Ascension Day, Redlegs, Potter's Field and Aliyyah), two collections of short stories and two non-fiction books. He has had three full-length stage plays produced internationally, with five shorter pieces and four collaborations with Spanish dramatists. He has written over 50 hours of television, and more of radio drama. He has worked in collaboration with visual artists on several pieces of public art, has published poems, broadcasts regularly and writes for Scottish and London newspapers.
Dolan is currently working on a sequel to Potter's End, two stage plays and a doctorate on the relationship between historical chronicle and narrative fiction.

Novels

Ascension Day (Headline Review, 1999) won the McKitterick First Novel Prize.

"…Dolan’s post-industrial and post-imperialist Glasgow: ‘such quiet, modest little groupings of streets, yet their shadow stretched and fell for thousands of miles, as afar as Africa, India, America.’ This long-range view gives the novel great power, as Dolan draws his characters inexorably together, in the lost, once-great, city on the Clyde." - Christopher Hart, Scottish Review of Books.[2]

Redlegs (Vagabond Voices, 2012)

"Good things come to those who wait, and this is a good thing… An engrossing and compelling novel... lingering richly in the memory… A fine novel" - The Scotsman.[3]
"A powerful, disturbing tale, written with scrupulous care both for words and their hidden meanings" - The Independent.[4]
"A compelling tale" - The Skinny (magazine).[5]
"A gripping piece of work… Beautiful, rich prose that evokes a place, a sense of time and the beat of Elspeth's (the protagonist’s) heart" - The Herald.[6]

Short Stories

Chris Dolan's short stories have appeared in various magazines and anthologies and have been broadcast on BBC Radio.

Poor Angels (Polygon, 1995) was shortlisted for the Saltire Prize, and included both the winning story for 1995 Scotland on Sunday / Macallan Prize (Sleet and Snow), and runner-up the following year (Year of the Vezzas).

"He holds you in a tight grip right from the start and manages to combine a sense of raw nostalgia with a profoundly moving atmosphere of love and loss." - Scotland on Sunday [7] on Sleet and Snow
"Dolan’s stunning, cornucopian imagination and the tremendous variety of his writings." - Deliah Quinn on Poor Angels and Other Stories
"Dolan’s most striking feature is his ability to fuse realism and surrealism, to walk a tightrope between the ordinary and the bizarre." - Douglas Gifford on Poor Angels and Other Stories

Non-fiction titles

An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald (Birlinn 2009)

"Dolan's book is both personal and universal." - The Scotsman.[8]
"Chris Dolan has done a fantastic job of uncovering Ethel MacDonald's life story...fascinating and enlightening." - The Skinny (magazine)[9]
"An illuminating, sparkling crash course in events and ideas that shaped Glasgow and Europe for decades. A wonderful author, Dolan achieves the vim and colour one might expect of a scriptwriter, yet without colouring in too many blanks with hypotheses. An Anarchist's Story is a long-overdue, highly worthy account of a life more of us need to know about. When stories as astonishing as this are so well told, fiction looks dull by comparison." - History Scotland Review

John Lennon – The Original Beatle (Argyll, 2010)

"Chris Dolan captures the essence of John Lennon creative life and work- pop star, spokesman, tragic victim, madman, jester and genius." [10]

Plays

His first play, The Veil, premiered at the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh in 1991. His other plays include Sabina (1998), a bittersweet comedy set in Glasgow, which won an Edinburgh Festival Fringe First in 1996, and which he adapted for BBC Radio 4 in 2000. Sabina has had nine productions to date. The Reader, an adaptation of the novel by Bernhard Schlink, was first staged in 2000 by Borderline Theatre Company, second and third productions were staged in Edinburgh, LA and San Francisco. His next play The Angel's Share (2000) toured Scotland and was most recently staged in Carlisle. He also translates and adapts drama from Spanish, including Short Spin and Wheesht, and translates his own work into Spanish.[11]

Writing for screen and radio

He writes regularly for radio, including four original plays and many adaptations, including Umberto Eco's Name of the Rose, The Master of Ballantrae by Robert Louis Stevenson and several of Ian Rankin's Rebus novels. His four-part modern take on Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde was broadcast in October 2012.
He writes and presents radio features and documentaries for BBC Radio Scotland and for BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 4.[12]
He writes screenplays which have included Poor Angels and Ring of Truth as well as TV drama documentaries, An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald, Barbado'ed both broadcast by BBC and Red Oil for Channel 4.
Dolan has written extensively for Taggart, Take the High Road, Machair (TV series), and River City for which he has been writing since its inception.

Awards

He has won several awards: 2000 McKitterick Prize, Ascension Day 1999 Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Award 1999 Macallan/Scotland on Sunday Short Story Competition, 'Year of the Vezzas' 1999 Canongate Prize for Journalism 1996 Edinburgh Festival Fringe First, Sabina! 1995 Saltire Society Scottish First Book of the Year Award, Poor Angels and Other Stories, shortlist 1995 Macallan/Scotland on Sunday Short Story Competition, 'Sleet and Snow'

(Source: http://literature.britishcouncil.org/chris-dolan)

Bibliography and other works

Fiction

Novels

Short stories

Non-Fiction

Books

Plays

Radio drama

Television drama

Film

Television, DOC

Radio Writer/presenter Inc’s

Poetry

Prizes

References

  1. British Council Literature, Chris Dolan , Retrieved 20.02.2013
  2. Book review: Redlegs. Scottish Review of Books , Retrieved 18.02.2013
  3. Book review: Redlegs. The Scotsman, 14 July 2012 , Retrieved 22.02.2013
  4. Redlegs by Chris Dolan. The Independent, 12 July 2012 , Retrieved 21.02.2013
  5. Redlegs by Chris Dolan. The Skinny, 25 July 2012 , Retrieved 10.02.2013
  6. Slaves to the past. Herald Scotland, 14 July 2012 , Retrieved 14.02.2013
  7. Sleet and Snow Scotland on Sunday,"Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 29, 2013. Retrieved July 7, 2007., Retrieved 23.02.2013
  8. An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald, The Scotsman,, Retrieved 17.02.2013
  9. An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald by Chris Dolan. The Skinny (magazine), 22 April 2009 , Retrieved 19.02.2013
  10. John Lennon – The Original Beatle, Argyll 2010: Inspiration series
  11. British Council Literature,, Retrieved 28.02.2013
  12. British Councile Literature,, Retrieved 17.02.2013

Chris Dolan British Council Literature
Chris Dolan Books from Scotland
Barbados’ed Barbado'ed Scotland's Sugar Slaves - (BBC Full Length Documentary) on YouTube


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