Patrick Denman Flanery (born 1975) is an American author and academic. As of 2023[update] he is a chair of creative writing at the University of Adelaide in Adelaide, South Australia. He is known for his 2012 novel, Absolution.
Early life and education
Patrick Denman Flanery[1] was born in 1975 in California,[2] the son of politically liberal parents,[3] and grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, United States.[4][2] He attended inner city de-segregated schools, "grew up with a consciousness of the problems of American race", and became aware of apartheid South Africa at an early age.[3]
He graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Film and Television Production at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. He worked for some years as a freelance script reader for Sony Pictures Entertainment and then as literary scout for a film production company in New York City. The job entailed reading the best contemporary fiction, with the aim of determining whether it was suitable for adapting as a feature film.[3]
Flanery has written the novels Absolution (2012), Fallen Land (2013), I Am No One (2016), and Night for Day (2019).[5]
Novels
Flanery's debut novel, Absolution, weaves a story of South Africa's violent past and troubled present, built around a series of conversations between a reclusive novelist, Clare, and her official biographer Sam, an expatriate South African.[11] Flanery said that "What I was trying to do in Absolution was suggest there was moral ambiguity on both sides, or at least that ordinary people had to make impossible choices".[3] It was originally published in 2012 by Atlantic Books in the UK and Riverhead in the USA and has since been translated into eleven languages. It won the Spear's First Best Book Award[12][13] and was shortlisted for several other awards. A review in The Financial Times declared "Absolution serves as proof, if any were needed, that a novel can be both unashamedly literary and compellingly readable".[14]
Taking up themes of the housing boom and bust, reparations for land stolen from black farmers, and creeping surveillance, Fallen Land was very much in tune with the Zeitgeist when it came out in 2013. James Bradley of The Washington Post noted that "it paints a chilling picture of a society deranged by violence, paranoia and its own fantasies of self-reliance".[15] The story is told from the perspective of an elderly African American woman who is forced into selling her family farm.[16][17]
Flanery's third novel, I Am No One, was released in 2016. This book is about a university professor who returns to New York after teaching at Oxford. Various disconcerting events convince him he is under surveillance and his privacy is being invaded by unknown people.[18] It is written in the first person, which A.S. Byatt called "a big risk".[19]
A memoir, which Flanery described as "a hybrid creative-critical memoir", entitled The Ginger Child: On Family, Loss and Adoption, was published in 2019.[5] It tells of the four-year quest by Flanery and his husband to adopt a child, relating the challenges of same-sex adoption.[21][22]
Flanery co-wrote a short drama film released in 2016, Three Days Gone.[24]
In 2020 he wrote and directed a short documentary film, Sensitive Surfaces, about South African artist Kate Gottgens.[25]
Recognition and accolades
Flanery has had two writing fellowships in Italy: at the Bellagio Center (owned by the Rockefeller Foundation) in 2013,[23] and the Santa Maddalena Foundation,[b][26] in the village of Donnini, near Florence, in 2013 and 2015.[27][23]
One of the pleasures of reading Flanery is the tussle between ways of understanding the shapes of stories and language. He mixes, to quote an interview he gave, “expressionism, symbolism, surrealism” into what he calls "critical realism" – he writes realist novels which show their awareness that realism is a self-conscious form like others.
Flanery's partner is (as of 2012[update]) an academic who was born in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, so Flanery "spent a lot of time in South Africa with extended family and friends, and living in domestic spaces".[3]
^ Also known as the Gregor von Rezzori and Beatrice Monti della Corte Retreat for Writers; named after Gregor von Rezzori and his wife Beatrice Monti della Corte, who promoted and celebrated literature and art.
^"STIAS was established in 1999 to provide a 'creative space for the mind', a fellowship programme that would advance cross-disciplinary research at the highest level."[28]