“I'm
always terrified when I'm writing.” – Mary Karr
Born
in Groves, Texas on Jan. 16, 1955 Karr brought her early years to life in
the New York Times bestselling memoir, The
Liars' Club, a book that delves into her deeply troubled childhood. The book is the first of her three memoirs - the other two being Cherry and Lit: A Memoir - and the foundation for her nonfiction book The Art of Memoir.
Karr also has had success as a poet and essayist,
winning the prestigious Whiting Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the
Pushcart Prize for her writing. A sought-after regular
on the speakers’ circuit, she now resides in New York and is a writing
professor at Syracuse University. The
most recent of her five poetry collections is Tropic of Squalor.
“Young
writers often mistakenly choose a certain vein or style based on who they want
to be, unconsciously trying to blot out who they actually are. You want to
escape yourself,” Karr said.
“The thing I have to do as a writer, and that
God permits me to do, is that I have to be willing to fail.”
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