Lia Mills

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Lia Mills
BornDublin
OccupationWriter
NationalityIrish

Lia Mills is an Irish writer. She writes novels, short stories and literary non-fiction. She has also worked on several public art commissions and as an arts consultant.

Her first novel, Another Alice (1996), was nominated for The Irish Times Irish Fiction prize. Her second novel, Nothing Simple (2005), was shortlisted for the Irish Novel of the Year at the inaugural Irish Book Awards. A memoir of her diagnosis of and treatment for oral cancer, In Your Face, appeared in 2007. Peter Sheridan, Joe Duffy and others named it as a favourite book of 2007. Her fourth book and third novel, Fallen was published in 2014. With Dr Denise MacCarthy she co-edited Word of Mouth: Coping with and Surviving Mouth, Head and Neck Cancers (2013).

Born in Dublin, she has lived in London and America before returning to Ireland in 1990. She claims that men are "more likely" to read writers who are also men, to the exclusion of women.[1]

In 2016, Trinity College Dublin awarded her with an honorary doctorate.[2]

Books[edit]

  • Fallen - Penguin Ireland, 2014
  • In Your Face - Penguin Ireland, 2007
  • Nothing Simple - Penguin Ireland, 2005
  • Another Alice - Poolbeg Press, 1996

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gleeson, Sinead (28 April 2018). "A profound deafness to the female voice". The Irish Times. At another panel, Lia Mills pointed out that men are more likely to read male writers, arguing that women are omnivorous readers, flitting between books by both genders.
  2. ^ "Registrar : Trinity College Dublin, the University of Dublin, Ireland". www.tcd.ie. Retrieved 7 January 2020.

External links[edit]