Candy Gourlay (née Quimpo) is a Filipino journalist and author based in the United Kingdom whose debut novel Tall Story (2010) was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal.[2][3]

Candy Gourlay
Gourlay in 2013
Gourlay in 2013
BornMaria Cristina Lopez Quimpo[1]
Davao City, Philippines
OccupationJournalist, writer
NationalityBritish, Filipino
Alma materAteneo de Manila University, 1984
Saint Theresa's College of Quezon City, 1980
Period2010–present (fiction)
GenreChildren's Books, Fiction, Middle Grade, Teen Novels, Young Adult
Notable worksTall Story (2010), Shine (2013)
Notable awardsCrystal Kite Prize for Europe
2014
National Children's Book Award of the Philippines
2012
Crystal Kite Prize for Europe
2011
SpouseRichard Gourlay[1]
Children3[1]
Website
candygourlay.com

Biography edit

Gourlay was born and raised in the Philippines.

Career edit

Journalist edit

From 1984 to 1989, she worked as a journalist in the Philippines, notably as a staffwriter and later associate editor of the weekly opposition tabloid Mr & Ms Special Edition, which played a significant role in the overthrow of the 21 year regime of Filipino dictator Ferdinand Marcos.[4][5][6]

Her other positions include:

  • 1984, staff writer, Mr & Ms Special Edition (Manila)
  • 1985, associate editor, Mr & Ms Special Edition (Manila)
  • 1986, desk editor, Philippine Daily Inquirer (Manila)
  • 1987, correspondent, Asia Magazine (Manila)
  • 1989, staff writer, Marketing Magazine (London)
  • 1990, London correspondent, Inter Press Service (London)[7]
  • 2005, presenter and writer, Motherless Nation, BBC Radio 4 documentary on the social impact of Philippine migration

Author edit

Her debut novel Tall Story (2010) won the National Children's Book Award of the Philippines in 2012 and the Crystal Kite Award for the British Isles in 2011. Tall Story was shortlisted for 13 prizes, notably: the Waterstones Children's Book Prize,[8][9] the Branford Boase Award, the Blue Peter Book Award[10] and the UKLA Children's Book Prize.[11] It was nominated for the Carnegie Medal.[12]

Her second novel Shine (2013) was longlisted for the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize[13] and won the Crystal Kite Award for the British Isles in 2014.

Bone Talk (2018) was shortlisted for the Costa Book Award and the CILIP Carnegie Medal.[14]

Published books edit

  • Hinabing Gunita (Woven Memories): Filipinos in the United Kingdom (London: Centre for Filipinos, 2004)[15]
  • Animal Tricksters (Oxford University Press, 2010) – OCLC 495598126.
  • Tall Story (Oxford: David Fickling Books, 2010)
  • Shine (David Fickling, 2013)
  • Bone Talk (David Fickling, 2018)
  • Wild Song (David Fickling, 2023)

References edit

[full citation needed]

External links edit