fiction.wikisort.org - WriterSusan Daitch is an American novelist and short story writer. In 1996 David Foster Wallace called her "one of the most intelligent and attentive writers at work in the U.S. today."[1]
American novelist
Susan Daitch |
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 Susan Daitch (2007) |
Nationality | American |
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Education | Barnard College |
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Genre | Short Story, Novel |
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Biography
Susan Daitch graduated from Barnard College[2] and attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program.[3]
She is the author of six novels and a collection of short stories.[4]
[5]
Her work has appeared in Guernica,[6] Bomb,[7] Pacific Review,[8] The Barcelona Review,,[9] Fault Magazine,[10] Rain Taxi,,[11] Tablet.,[12] Tin House,[13] McSweeney’s,[14] Bomb,[15] Conjunctions,[16] The Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Fiction,[17] and elsewhere.
Her novel, Siege of Comedians was listed as one of the best books of 2021[18] in The Wall Street Journal.
She taught at Barnard College, Columbia University, and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.[19]
She teaches at Hunter College.[20]
She was a 2012 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow.[2]
She is a supporter of Women for Afghan Women.[21]
She lives in Brooklyn.
Bibliography
- L.C. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987; Dalkey Archive Press, 2002
- The Colorist. Vintage Contemporaries, 1990
- Storytown: Stories. Dalkey Archive Press, 1996
- Paper Conspiracies. City Lights Books, 2011
- Fall Out. Madras Press, 2013
- The Lost Civilization of Suolucidir. City Lights Books, 2016
- White Lead: A Novel of Suspense. Alibi, 2016 (e-book)
- Siege of Comedians. Dzanc Books, 2021
References
Further reading
- McCaffery, Larry (1993). The Review of Contemporary Fiction: William T. Vollmann, Susan Daitch, David Foster Wallace; Younger Writers Issue. Illinois State University. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- Nericcio, William (1993). "Rend[er]ing L.C.: Susan Daitch Meets Borges & Borges, Delacroix, Marx, Derrida, Daumier, and Other Textualized Bodies.". Review of Contemporary Fiction (PDF). San Diego State University.
- Price, David W. (2000). "Poetical History: Historical Experience, Nietzschean Genealogy and Susan Daitch's L.C.". In Edmund E. Jacobitti (ed.). Composing Useful Pasts: History As Contemporary Politics. SUNY Press. pp. 89–. ISBN 978-0-7914-9209-3. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- Scarparo, Susanna (1 January 2005). "Fiction as History: Lucienne Crozier and Susan Daitch". Elusive Subjects: Biography as Gendered Metafiction. Troubador Publishing Ltd. pp. 83–. ISBN 978-1-904744-19-1. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
External links
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