"Our
task as fiction writers isn't just to report something that didn't really
happen. We have to give what we write a sense of reality. The tool
of our tradition is language." - Alice McDermott
Born
in New York City in 1953, McDermott is the author of 9 novels including Charming
Billy, winner of both the American Book Award and the U.S. National
Book Award for Fiction. Her novel Someone was
a National Book Award finalist, and three of her other books were finalists for
the Pulitzer Prize. Her most recent
novel, Absolution, won the Mark Twain American Voice in
Literature Award in 2024, the same year she was inducted into the American
Academy of Arts and Letters and honored with the Eugene O’Neil Lifetime
Achievement Award.
McDermott,
who now resides just outside Washington, DC, has been a writer-in-residence at
several colleges and universities and was a longtime Professor at
Johns Hopkins University. She also was
on the faculty of the renowned Sewanee Writers Conference for 20 years. Her dozens of short stories and essays have
been published in journals, magazines and newspapers across the country, and she
is the author of the essay collection, What About the Baby?
“I'm
not writing fiction to convince anybody of anything,” she said. “I've always believed that you go to
literature to find the shared human experience."
No comments:
Post a Comment