“I don't think there was a particular book that made me want to write. They all did.” – Elizabeth Strout
Strout, who was born this day in 1956, won the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for Olive
Kitteridge, one of my favorite collections of short stories (and a great
HBO mini-series, that I also loved).
Of course that’s not all this gifted New
Englander has produced since she had her first short story published in
1982. A small town product (mostly
growing up in New Hampshire and Maine), where her father was a science
professor, and her mother – who she said was a great inspiration for her
writing – taught high school.
Strout has spent most of her adult (and writing)
years in New York City, although she and husband James Tierney split their time
between NYC and Maine, where he is the former Attorney General. Her short stories and nonfiction pieces have
been published in everything from literary magazines to Redbook and Seventeen.
“I'm writing for my ideal reader,
for somebody who's willing to take the time, who's willing to get lost in a new
world, who's willing to do their part,” she said of her award-winning work. “But then I have to do my part and give them a
sound and a voice that they believe in enough to keep going.”
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