Lara Calleja
Lara Calleja | |
---|---|
Born | August 20, 1988 |
Notable awards | 2021 EU Prize for Literature |
Lara Calleja (born 20 August 1988) is a Maltese novelist and playwright.[1]
Early and personal life
[edit]She was raised in the village of Marsaskala.[2] She attended a Catholic secondary school[3] and studied Near Eastern studies at university,[2] graudating with honors in 2010.[4] After graduating, Calleja worked part-time as a librarian for six years.[4] In 2020, she quit a career in tourism to become a freelance writer and translator.[4]
Calleja has been involved in political activism since she was 16.[2] She has joined the activist organization Moviment Graffitti.[5] She has congenital myasthenia gravis, which "causes weaknesses in her facial features and arms".[6]
Writing career
[edit]Calleja has cited Immanuel Mifsud as her "wake-up call" to Maltese literature, encountering his work when she was 17. Mifsud later met Calleja, and encouraged her to continue writing.[5]
Her debut novel, Lucy Min?, was published in 2016 and was nominated for the Maltese National Book Prize.[7] The work is a coming-of-age novel following the titular Lucy.[8] Miriam Calleja, for the Times of Malta, noted of the work, "Calleja has set out to write what some would consider unwritable: the dark, not-so-polite thoughts, the anonymous one-night-stands, and the downright awkwardness that might be distinctively Maltese".[8]
She began writing her second book, the short story anthology Kissirtu Kullimkien (You Have Destroyed Everything), in 2016; it was published in 2020.[3] The work won the National Book Prize for new writers.[2] The book also won the 2021 EU Prize for Literature, making her the first Maltese women to win the award.[9]
Many of Calleja's stories contain political elements,[1] as in her anthology, where many of the stories deal with over-construction,[5] and one which centers a "traumatised migrant".[10][3]
Calleja is also a playwright; her debut play Taralalla was staged at the Spazju Kreattiv venue in Valletta in late 2021.[3][4][11]
Calleja is also the founder and CEO of the speech-writing service Mil-Qalb.[12]
Publications
[edit]- Lucy min? (Merlin Publishers, 2016)
- Kissirtu Kullimkien (Merlin Publishers, 2020)
Awards
[edit]- 2017 National Book Award shortlist, for Lucy min?[2]
- 2021 EU Prize for Literature, for Kissirtu Kullimkien[2]
- 2021 National Book Prize for new writers, for Kissirtu Kullimkien[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Tanti, Noel. "Lara Calleja". HELA. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Lara Calleja". IP Why Not. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ a b c d Reljic, Teodor (2020-05-13). "Singing through the wreckage | Lara Calleja". Malta Today.
- ^ a b c d "Lara Calleja". EU Prize for Literature.
- ^ a b c Delia, Mark (2020-04-28). "'Kissirtu kullimkien' – tackling the construction frenzy". The Malta Independent. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ Farrugia, Claire (2022-07-08). "'I can now consider having children': writer Lara Calleja on embryo testing". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ "National Book Prize 2017 shortlist". Times of Malta. 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ a b Calleja, Miriam (2016-04-24). "Getting to know Lucy". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ "Lara Calleja is Malta's 2021 EUPL winner". European Commission. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ Azzopardi, Jean Paul (2021-05-18). "Lara Calleja Is The First Maltese Woman To Win European Literature Prize". Lovin Malta. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
- ^ Kreattiv, Spazju; Calleja, Lara; Abela, Lee-N. (2021-10-30), Taralalla (Theater program) (in Maltese)
- ^ Abela, Benjamin (2021-08-09). "'A condition is part of a person, but it does not define that person' – Mill-Qalb Founder". MaltaCEOs.mt. Retrieved 2025-04-01.