“Ordering is difficult. It's
like arranging pieces of music in a concert: What do you put first? What do you
put after the intermission? I want the reader to be sort of surprised, to come
to each story freshly.” – Lydia Davis
Born in Massachusetts on July 15, 1947 Davis is primarily a short story
writer, although she’s also published novels and essays and served as
a translator from French and other languages. She’s especially
noted for her translations of French literary classics, including
Proust's Swann’s Way and Flaubert’s Madame Bovary.
Winner of the Man Booker Prize for her
lifetime body of work, Davis has been acclaimed for the brevity and humor of
many of her short stories. Davis has compared her shorter
stories to skyscrapers, because, "They are surrounded by an imposing
blank expanse." Some of her stories have been labeled poetry,
even though she insists they are not. A number of her stories are
highlighted in The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis. Her most recent works are 2023’s Our
Strangers: Stories and 2025’s Into the Weeds.
While both her parents were writers
and teachers, Davis gravitated toward a career in music, initially studying
piano, then violin. But she said it probably was inevitable that she
would become a writer.
"I was probably always headed
to being a writer, even though that wasn't my first love,” she
said. “I guess I must have always wanted to write in some part of me
or I wouldn't have done it.”
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