jane-rogers-credit-linda-newbery

Jane
Rogers

Jane Rogers is a novelist, dramatist and writer of short stories. Her ten novels include Her Living Image (Somerset Maugham award), Promised Lands (set in Australia in 1788 and winner of the Writers’ Guild best novel award), Island and The Testament of Jessie Lamb (ManBooker longlisted, Arthur C. Clarke award, 2012). As a novelist the themes she often returns to are the parent–child relationship, women’s lives, idealism and its fallout, and the power of stories. In 1994 she was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Jane has written drama for radio and TV, including an award-winning adaptation of her own novel Mr Wroe’s Virgins for BBC2. Her radio work includes original drama, adaptations of her own novels and stories, and Classic Serial adaptations of writers she loves, among them Edith Wharton, John Wyndham, and Robert Louis Stevenson.

Jane has taught creative writing in schools, Arvon courses, Paris Sorbonne IV, the University of Adelaide, and Tororo in Uganda, where she ran a radio-writing course to set up a soap opera for the charity Mifumi. She is Professor Emerita at Sheffield Hallam University, and has run an RLF Reading Round scheme in Banbury where she now lives. Her most recent teaching has been Short Story courses for Faber Academy.

Jane Rogers is a novelist, dramatist and writer of short stories. Her ten novels include Her Living Image (Somerset Maugham award), Promised Lands (set in Australia in 1788 and winner of the Writers’ Guild best novel award), Island and The Testament of Jessie Lamb (ManBooker longlisted, Arthur C. Clarke award, 2012). As a novelist the themes she often returns to are the parent–child relationship, women’s lives, idealism and its fallout, and the power of stories. In 1994 she was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Jane has written drama for radio and TV, including an award-winning adaptation of her own novel Mr Wroe’s Virgins for BBC2. Her radio work includes original drama, adaptations of her own novels and stories, and Classic Serial adaptations of writers she loves, among them Edith Wharton, John Wyndham, and Robert Louis Stevenson.

Jane has taught creative writing in schools, Arvon courses, Paris Sorbonne IV, the University of Adelaide, and Tororo in Uganda, where she ran a radio-writing course to set up a soap opera for the charity Mifumi. She is Professor Emerita at Sheffield Hallam University, and has run an RLF Reading Round scheme in Banbury where she now lives. Her most recent teaching has been Short Story courses for Faber Academy.

artwork-image

PREVIOUS NOMINATIONS

RELATED FEATURES

News May 21 2026

2026 Dublin Literary Award Winner Revealed

Discover this year's winner!
Video May 16 2026

Brigitte Giraud – Live Fast Q&A

Q&A Session with 2026 Dublin Literary Award shortlisted author Brigitte Giraud, author of Live Fast, exploring the inspirations behind her novel.
Video May 12 2026

Laurent Binet – Perspective(s) Q&A

Check out our Q&A with Laurent Binet, author of shortlisted title Perspective(s), as he discusses the inspirations behind his work and reflects on the role libraries have played in shaping his journey
Video May 8 2026

Ali Smith – Gliff Q&A

Shortlisted author Ali Smith discusses the creative inspirations behind Gliff and reflects on the significance of libraries throughout her reading and writing life in our latest Q&A.

STAY CONNECTED

Stay in touch and sign up to our newsletter to receive all the latest news and updates on the Dublin Literary Award.