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Dr Isabel Waidner

Isabel

Reader in Creative Writing

Email: i.waidner@qmul.ac.uk
Website: https://linktr.ee/isabelwaidner

Profile

I am the author of five novels – including Sterling Karat Gold, which won the Goldsmiths Prize and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and the Republic of Consciousness Prize, and Corey Fah Does Social Mobility which was shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke Award. I have taught Creative Writing – at the intersections with cultural theory and performance – at Queen Mary University of London since 2020.

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Research

Research Interests:

  • The novel 
  • Interdisciplinary and innovative forms of creative writing 
  • Queer and trans writing with an emphasis on intersectionality 
  • Creative-critical writing and practice-led research 

Recent and On-Going Research 

My latest novel As If is forthcoming from Hamish Hamilton/Penguin Random House in February 2026 in the UK, and Farrar, Straus and Giroux in May 2026. It is a novel about two strangers, a failed actor and a failed father, who begin to live for and as each other—an existential cat-and-mouse story of grief, loss, ambition, and the possibility of making oneself anew. 

Published in 2023, my novel Corey Fah Does Social Mobility takes issue with received notions of social mobility, often related as simplistic triumph-over-tragedy narratives, or connected to mythologies around ‘merit’. It uses the example of a writer, Corey Fah, winning a prize to make the case that it might not be quite as straightforward: supposedly propelled into contexts of privilege and opportunity as a result of their win, Corey has to content with their difference and their unconventional past catching up with them—in the shape of an unorthodox Bambi-inspired character. Instead of capitalising on their win, Corey is lead on a diversion involving a daytime television show, its time-travelling host, and a trip to the Forest of their childhood. Read the Guardian review. 

My Goldsmiths-Prize-winning novel Sterling Karat Gold is a surreal inquiry into the real effects of state violence on gender-nonconforming, working-class and black people. Published in 2021, it develops the potential of performance—as staged in literary fiction—to advance progressive cultures, politics and modes of sociality. It takes inspiration from contemporary and historical performance practices such as Mojisola Adebayo’s Afriquia theatre, Kevin Killian’s Poet’s Theatre and contemporary queer DIY artists’ plays.  

A key aspect of my work has been my research into the performance of creative writing and how to do ‘readings’ differently. I am committed to collaborating and making connections with other writers, performers and audiences, and my work in the area of live literary events—most recently This Isn’t a Dream: Conversations with Writers and Queers Read This with the ICA—has been instrumental in establishing queer and trans writing as a medium which is helping to mobilise new communities in the UK and beyond in recent years. 

Publications

Novels

  • As if. Hamish Hamilton/Penguin, 2026. US: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2026. 
  • Corey Fah Does Social Mobility. UK: Hamish Hamilton/Penguin, 2023; US: Graywolf Press, 2024.
  • Sterling Karat Gold. UK: Peninsula Press, 2021; US: Graywolf Press, 2023.
  • We Are Made of Diamond Stuff. Dostoyevsky Wannabe, 2019/Peninsula Press, 2022.
  • Gaudy Bauble. UK: Dostoyevsky Wannabe, 2017.

Edited Volume

  • Liberating the Canon: An Anthology of Innovative Literature. Dostoyevsky Wannabe, 2018.

Creative-Critical Writing, Plays and Short Fictions (recent sample)

Supervision

I welcome enquiries from potential doctoral students interested in the areas of innovative and interdisciplinary writing, and creative writing at the intersections with cultural theory, performance, visual art and queer/trans theory.

Public Engagement

I am a co-founder and curator of Queers Read This, a live reading series platforming LGBTQI+ and working-class writers and writers of colour since 2018. I was also the curator and host of This Isn’t a Dream, a fortnightly literary talk show presented by the ICA via Instagram live between 2021-2022. I have delivered public talks and keynote lectures at Oxford University, Cambridge University, King’s College, Goldsmiths UoL, and I speak regularly at literary festivals including Cambridge Literature Festival, Edinburgh International Book, Humber Mouth, and AWP in the US. My work has been reviewed and discussed in the Guardian, New York Times, frieze, New Statesman and the TLS, for example, and I have been interviewed in the Observer, New Statesman, and by PEN America, among others.

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