Unsworth grew up in Prestwich and attended Bowker Vale Infant School and Crumpsall Lane Junior School before becoming a pupil at Bury Grammar School for Girls.[1] It was at Bury Grammar that she met writer Sherry Ashworth, then a teacher, who became a mentor and friend and who later published Unsworth's first novel under her Hidden Gem Press imprint.[2] Unsworth studied English literature at the University of Liverpool[3] and graduated with an MA from Manchester University's Centre for New Writing.[4]
Early work
Unsworth's short fiction has been published in various places including by Comma Press,[5] and her story I Arrive First was included in The Best British Short Stories 2012, published by Salt.[6]
She has also worked as a journalist and is a former columnist for The Big Issue in the North.[7]
Novels
Hungry, the Stars and Everything
Her debut novel Hungry, the Stars and Everything, was published in June 2011 by Hidden Gem Press[2] and won a Betty Trask Award from the Society of Authors.[8] The novel was also shortlisted for the Portico Prize for Fiction 2012.[9]
Set in a restaurant called Bethel, the novel follows the life of restaurant critic Helen as she eats her way through a tasting menu, evoking memories. Unsworth used the name Bethel for her setting after her friend, the chef Mary-Ellen McTague, had considered but rejected using it for her new restaurant Aumbry which she opened in Prestwich.[10] The following year Unsworth and McTague worked together to create a real life version of the meal featured in the book as part of Prestwich Book Festival. The event was held at Aumbry, with diners able to eat some of the dishes that appeared in the novel whilst Unsworth read extracts of her book at intervals throughout the meal.[11]
Animals
Unsworth's second novel, Animals, was published in 2014. The book follows the hedonistic adventures of two young women, best friends Laura and Tyler, as they live their lives in a fog of alcohol and drugs, before circumstances and their friendships start to change. The book received positive reviews, with writer Caitlin Moran describing it as "Withnail for Girls" and declaring that she wished she had written it.[12]The Guardian praised Unsworth as "a tremendous talent".[13]The New York Times praised the novel as "an emotionally complex and often go-for-broke-witty book".[14]
In 2013 Unsworth collaborated with writers Alison Moore, Jenn Ashworth, Tom Fletcher and Richard Hirst to produce a collection of Christmas ghost stories, published as The Longest Night. The edition was limited to 300 copies[17] and the writers performed atmospheric readings in venues which included one in a supposedly haunted room which had previously been used as a morgue, in The Church Inn, Prestwich.[18]
The following year, the Curious Tales Collective released a second volume of short stories entitled Poor Souls Light which celebrated the centenary of Robert Aickman and saw contributions from the original group of writers, plus guest writers M John Harrison and Johnny Mains. The edition again had a limited run, this time with 500 copies published. Both works contained illustrations by artist Beth Ward.[19]
Other work
In November 2014 Unsworth took part in Manchester Central Library's Chaos to Order season which involved musicians and artists taking over the newly refurbished library for a week and organising a diverse range of events. Unsworth became the Writer in Residence and spent the week running drop-in writing workshops, Q&A sessions with contemporary writers from around the UK, and daily readings of Frank O'Hara's Lunch Poems.[20]