Michelle Lovric

Michelle Lovric is a novelist, journalist and anthologist.
Her third novel, The Remedy, was long-listed for the 2005 Orange Prize
for Fiction. The Remedy is a literary murder-mystery set against the
background of the quack medicine industry in the eighteenth century.
Lovric's first novel, Carnevale, is the story of the painter Cecilia
Cornaro, described by The Times as the possessor of ‘the most
covetable life’ in fiction in 2001.
In her second novel, The Floating Book, a chorus of characters relates
the beginning of the print industry in Venice. The book explores the
translation of raw emotion into saleable merchandise from the points
of view of poets, editors, publishers – and their lovers. The
Floating Book, a London Arts award winner, was also selected as a
WH Smith ‘Read of the Week’.
Lovric reviews for publications including The Times and writes travel
articles about Venice. She has featured in several BBC radio documentaries
about Venice.
She combines her fiction work with editing, designing and producing
literary anthologies including her own translations of Latin and Italian
poetry. Her book Love Letters was a New York Times best-seller. She
maintains large databases of text and visual material on memoirs,
love poems and letters, female and male wit, slang/cursing/archaic
words and esoteric medical matters.
Lovric divides her time between London and Venice. She holds a workshop
in her home in London with published writers of poetry and prose,
fiction and memoir.
Website: www.michellelovric.com
email: michelle(at)lovric.demon.co.uk
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