Academic, novelist, and author of non-fiction.
Karí Gíslason has been a Lecturer in Creative Writing & Literary Studies in the Creative Industries Faculty at QUT, and has taught in Writing and Literary Studies at The University of Queensland, the University of Iceland, and Bond University, as well as at senior secondary colleges.
His PhD, a study of authorship in medieval Iceland, was completed at The University of Queensland in 2003, and was included on the UQ Dean's Commendation List for Outstanding Research Higher Degree Theses.
His research work has included projects on the teaching of Shakespeare in Australian universities, environmental law, and practices of translation and language training. He has been a member of the Practices of Literary Tourism Research Project looking into the role of literary tourism in Brisbane.
He has published and presented academic work on a range of topics in Old Norse-Icelandic studies, as well as authorship studies, narrative theory, and creative writing scholarship.
In 2011, Gíslason published an autobiography exploring his Icelandic heritage: it was shortlisted for the Queensland Literary Awards (People's Choice Queensland Book of the Year). In 2015, he published his first novel, The Ash Burner, a coming-of-age story in a small coastal town: like The Promise of Iceland, it was shortlisted for the People's Choice Queensland Book of the Year Award.
In 2017, Gíslason published Saga Land, co-authored with Richard Fidler: part travelogue, part family mystery, and part appreciation of the Icelandic sagas, the book follows the two men across Iceland.
As of 2018, he is an Associate Professor in the School of Creative Practice at QUT.