Linda Jaivin

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Linda Jaivin (born 27 March 1955)[1] is an Australian translator, essayist and novelist. She was born in New London, Connecticut, and migrated to Australia in 1986.[1][2]

Works

Jaivin has written a memoir of her experiences as a translator in China, The Monkey and the Dragon, as well as a number of novels. She co-edited an anthology on dissident writers in China, New Ghosts, Old Dreams:Chinese Rebel Voices with Geremie Barmé, in 1992. Jaivin has contributed to a number of magazines including the Australian magazine of politics and culture, The Monthly. She wrote for the Quarterly Essay Found in Translation: In Praise of a Plural World in November 2013. She has subtitled many Chinese films, including Farewell my Concubine and The Grandmaster. Jaivin has been a guest on the ABC radio program The Book Show[3] and a panelist on Q&A and other programs.[4][5]

Novels

  • Eat Me (1995)
  • Rock 'n' Roll Babes from Outer Space (1996)
  • Miles Walker, You're Dead (1999)
  • Dead Sexy (2000)
  • The Infernal Optimist (2006)
  • A Most Immoral Woman (2009)[6]
  • The Empress Lover (2014)

Works of non-fiction

  • New Ghosts, Old Dreams: Chinese Rebel Voices (1992)
  • Confessions of an S & M Virgin (1997)
  • The Monkey and the Dragon (2001)
  • Found In Translation: In Praise of a Plural World (2013)
  • Beijing (2014)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Bibliography of Australian Literature: F–J. Retrieved 19 December 2013. Note: The author has advised of a typographical error: "27 May" should read "27 March". This agrees with a statement made on her own website: [1]
  2. Bio, author's web site
  3. The Book Show, ABC Radio National
  4. China: Jianying Zha, Linda Jaivin and Paul French (television interview)
  5. Party Time: Living and Working in China (television interview)
  6. "A Most Immoral Woman" (radio interview)

External links


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