Senka MarićSenka Marić (born 1972) is a Bosnian writer. She is best known for her work as a poet and for her 2018 novel Kintsugi Tijela, which draws from the author's own experiences with breast cancer. Marić is also co-founder and editor-in-chief of the literary journal Strane. BiographySenka Marić was born in Mostar, a city in southern Bosnia and Herzegovina, in 1972.[1][2][3] She began writing poetry when she was eight years old.[4] After finishing secondary school, she studied theater education and comparative literature at the Faculty of Humanities, University of Mostar, and the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Sarajevo.[1][2] From 1991 to 1997, Marić fled the Bosnian War and lived in the United Kingdom, where she trained as a stylist at the Vidal Sassoon Academy in London.[1][5] After the war, she returned to Mostar, where she now works as a poet, novelist, translator, and journal editor. She runs the online literary journal Strane, which she co-founded in 2014 with Almin Kaplan and Srđan Gavrilović.[1][3][5] Marić, who writes in Bosnian,[6] also translates others' writing from English.[2] Marić is a breast cancer survivor, and her work frequently deals with this experience.[4][5][7][8] She has published three books of poetry: Odavde do nigdje ("From Here to Nowhere", 1997), To su samo riječi ("These Are Just Words", 2005), and Do smrti naredne ("Until the Next Death", 2016).[1][2][4][9][7] Her debut novel, Kintsugi Tijela, was published in 2018; it is based on the author's own experience with cancer, with the novel's narrator reexamining her childhood as she deals with illness and treatment. In 2019, it won the Meša Selimović prize , a major literary award for novels published in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, and Serbia.[5][9][10] Kintsugi Tijela has been translated into English by Celia Hawkesworth, and was published by Peirene Press under the title Body Kintsugi in late 2022; it became the first Bosnian winner of the PEN Translates award in 2021.[5][11][12] Marić has also twice received the Zija Dizdarević short story award, the top prize for short fiction in the country, in 2000 and 2013.[1] Critics have counted Marić as part of the first generation of female writers in Bosnia and Herzegovina who are not considered outliers because of their gender.[13] Selected works
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