Sandra Newman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Newman at the 2019 Texas Book Festival

Sandra Newman (born November 6, 1965 in Boston, Massachusetts) is an American writer. She has a BA from Polytechnic of Central London, and an MA from the University of East Anglia.[1]

Newman's first novel, The Only Good Thing Anyone Has Ever Done,[2] was first published in 2002 and received a nomination for the 2002 Guardian First Book Award.[3] The novel features an American adoptee from Guatemala named Chrysalis Moffat and focuses on events in her and her family's lives using an unusual style reminiscent of notes taken while composing the novel.[2]

Newman's third novel, The Country of Ice Cream Star (2014), was among eighty titles nominated for 2015 Folio Prize,[4] and among twenty works nominated for the 2015 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction.[5] The novel follows the protagonist, Ice Cream Fifteen Star, through a dystopian future United States while she searches for a cure for her brother's inherited disease.[5]

Her fourth novel, The Heavens (2019), published by Grove Atlantic, tells the story of a woman who lives in the early twenty-first century, but who returns every night in dreams to Elizabethan England, where she lives as Emilia Lanier, a Jewish poet whose circle of acquaintances includes an obscure poet named William Shakespeare.[6] The New York Times Book Review called it “a strange and beautiful hybrid.”[7]

She is the author of one additional novel, Cake (2008); a memoir, Changeling (2010); and a guide to Western literature, The Western Lit Survival Kit: How To Read The Classics Without Fear (2012). She is the co-author of How Not To Write A Novel (2008) and Read This Next (2010).

References[]

  1. ^ Interview, "The Times of London Magazine," July 10, 2010.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Jordan, Justine (August 10, 2002). "Tales from the unhappy childhood museum". Books. The Guardian. London. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  3. ^ "Guardian First Book Award 2002". The Guardian. London. The shortlist. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  4. ^ Flood, Alison (December 15, 2014). "Folio prize reveals 80 titles in contention for 2015 award". Books. The Guardian. London. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Baileys women's prize for fiction longlist - in pictures". The Guardian. London. March 10, 2015. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  6. ^ The Heavens | Grove Atlantic.
  7. ^ Berg, Laura Van Den (February 27, 2019). "A Heroine Who Lives at Once in Elizabethan England and 21st-Century New York". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
Retrieved from ""