Claire Askew

Claire Askew (born 10 March 1986) is a Scottish novelist and poet.

Biography
Claire Askew was born on 10 March 1986. She attended the University of Edinburgh, completing her undergraduate degree, postgraduate degree, and her PhD, before taking on the role as Writer in Residence at the institution. In 2017 her first two novels were bought by Hodder & Stoughton, with the first, All the Hidden Truths, being released in 2018. Her latest book, How to Burn a Woman, is a collection of poems featuring outcast women through history, including witches, which Askew herself identifies as.

Writing
The first book in her crime fiction series, which follows the work of DI Helen Birch, All the Hidden Truths, won the inaugural Bloody Scotland Scottish Crime Debut of the Year in 2019. In addition, the book was the winner of the 2016 Lucy Cavendish Fiction Prize, shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger and Debut Dagger awards, and longlisted for the 2014 Peggy Chapman-Andrews (Bridport) Novel Award. She has subsequently published What You Pay For and Cover Your Tracks with Hodder & Stoughton.

In 2020 she published Novelista, a writing guide.

Askew has also published three collections of poetry, The Mermaid and the Sailors (Red Squirrel Press, 2011), which won the 2010 Virginia Warbey Poetry Prize, This Changes Things (Bloodaxe, 2016) and How to burn a Woman (Bloodaxe, 2021). This Changes Things was shortlisted for the Saltire First Book Award, the Seamus Heaney Centre Poetry Prize, and the Michael Murphy Memorial Award.

Fiction

 * All the Hidden Truths (2018), Hodder & Stoughton
 * What You Pay For (2019), Hodder & Stoughton
 * Cover Your Tracks (2020), Hodder & Stoughton

Poetry

 * The Mermaid and the Sailors, Red Squirrel Press - 2011
 * This Changes Things (2016), Bloodaxe
 * How to Burn a Woman (2021), Bloodaxe

Non-fiction

 * Novelista (2020), John Murray Press

Poetry
Winner


 * Virginia Warbey Poetry Prize - 2010.
 * International Salt Prize for Poetry - 2012.

Shortlisted


 * Edwin Morgan Poetry Award - 2014 and 2016.

This Changes Things

Shortlisted


 * Saltire First Book Award -
 * The Seamus Heaney Centre Poetry Prize.
 * The Michael Murphy Memorial Award.