Melissa Hardy

I was born and raised in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Beginning in 1966 and for the next thirty years my father, novelist William Hardy, worked for the Cherokee Historical Association, first as Director of the symphonic drama Unto These Hills, which chronicles the events leading up to the Trail of Tears, the removal of the Cherokee to Oklahoma, then as its Producer. As a result I spent seven summers on the Qualla boundary, the reservation of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation. My 1995 short story collection, Constant Fire (Oberon) was set there and draws heavily on the history and mythology of that area.Viking Press published my first novel, A Cry of Bees, in 1970 when I was a mere 17 years old. Don't ask me how that happened. Cry of Bees is the story of a little girl growing up in a Southern Indiana boarding house full of decrepit old ladies. It's definitely what I'd call black humor. Out of print for many years, it can be found in most libraries and occasionally online at such sites as www.abebooks.com. In the twenty-five year publishing hiatus which followed, I:• took a BA in English with Honors in Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • learned French, Latin, Italian, Greek and German • earned an MA and All-But-Dissertation for a PhD in post classical history at the University of Toronto's Centre for Medieval Studies, writing on that fourth-century, neoclassical powerhouse, Athanasius of Alexandria. • was awarded many scholarships, among them the Dumbarton Oakes Fellowship, Massey College Junior Fellowship, AAUW Fellowship, Connaught Fellowship and a Fullbright to Rome which I didn't take, but, hey, they gave it to me! • became a Catholic and lapsed • became an Italiophile and never lapsed • suffered catastrophic illness in the form of Guillian-Barre Syndrome, which left me paralyzed and in hospital for a very long time • learned to walk again • raised three kids (Sabrina, Alice and William Miller), and acquired two more (Shanah and Raina Trevenna) when I married Ken Trevenna, a professional musician and Executive Director of Operations at the Ontario Institute of Audio Recording Technology (OIART). Ken hales from Northern Ontario, which provided me with both the inspiration and the setting for The Uncharted Heart and Surface Rights.• worked as a journalist and business communicator, logging twenty one years and counting as the Director of Communications for the London and St. Thomas Association of REALTORS®.In 1994 I won the Journey Prize for the most accomplished work to appear in a Canadian literary journal for Long Man the River, an excerpt from Constant Fire, originally published in Exile, then republished in both The Journey Prize Anthology (McClelland & Stewart) and Best Canadian Short Stories (Oberon, 1994). That was a blast. I was also nominated for the finalist for the Western Magazine Awards Program for fiction for The Ice Woman and my work has been anthologized in Best American Short Stories of 1999, Best American Short Stories of 2001, Houghton-Mifflin and The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, St. Martin's Press.My most recent collection of short stories, The Uncharted Heart, is set in the Porcupine region of Northern Ontario around the time of the Gold Rush and was published in 2001 by Knopf Canada. It received the Canadian Authors Association Jubilee Award. My most recent novel is Broken Road, set against the historical backdrop of the events leading up to the Trail of Tears. It was published in October 2009 by Exile Editions.The Geomancer’s Compass, published in 2012 by Tundra, is a young adult novel in which ancient Chinese cosmology and Augmented Reality work in conjunction to lay a generations-long curse.Surface Rights, slated for publication with Dundurn Press in December 2013, is a contemporary novel about a middle-aged woman who travels to the family cottage to scatter the ashes of her husband, father and twin sister, onl
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