Jump to content

Phil Jourdan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 19:05, 7 June 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Phil Jourdan
Born1987
OccupationWriter
GenreLiterature, magical realism, postmodernism, memoir
Website
slothrop.com/publications/

Phil Jourdan is a Portuguese/French author, musician and publisher based in the UK. His literary work is often experimental in nature, and he has been called "an avant gardist through and through".[1] His first book, Praise of Motherhood, was noted for its unconventional approach to the genre of memoir, as well as Jourdan's refusal to ‘allow the constraints of perspective or chronology to guide the text’[2] and "painful honesty".[3]

He is the author of three books:

  • What Precision, Such Restraint (2013, Perfect Edge Books)
  • John Gardner: A Tiny Eulogy (2012, Punctum books)
  • Praise of Motherhood (2011, Zero Books), a 2012 IndieFab Award Finalist.[4] Translated into Spanish as Madre in memoriam.[5]

His work has been featured in Chuck Palahniuk's anthology, Burnt Tongues.[6]

He fronts the rock band Paris and the Hiltons, whose song "Quentin Will End Up Killing Himself" was a winner in the 2013 Independent Music Awards.[7]

His translation of Portuguese novelist Jose Luis Peixoto's first book, Morreste-me, was published in 2011 in the University of Warwick's literary journal, The Warwick Review.[8]

Jourdan is one of the founders of the online writing workshop, LitReactor. He has worked with various presses, including Perfect Edge (fiction) and Zero Books (political nonfiction), and is an editor at Angry Robot.[9]

References

External links