Edmund White
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Edmund Valentine White III (born January 13, 1940) is an American novelist, short-story writer and critic. He is also currently a fiction writing teacher and the director of creative writing at Princeton University.
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[edit] Life and work
Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, he largely grew up in Chicago. White attended the prestigious Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan as a boy, then studied Chinese at the University of Michigan. He later worked in New York as a journalist. From 1983 to 1990 he lived in France.
White's best-known work is A Boy's Own Story, the first volume of an autobiographical-fiction series that continued with The Beautiful Room Is Empty and The Farewell Symphony, describing stages in the life of a gay man from boyhood to middle age. Several characters in these latter two novels are recognizably based on well-known individuals from White's New York-centered literary and artistic milieu.
An earlier novel Nocturnes for the King of Naples (1978) and a later novel The Married Man (2000) are also gay-themed and draw heavily on White's own life. In 2006 he published a nonfiction autobiography entitled My Lives. It is unusual in that it is organized by theme, rather than chronologically. White's autobiographical works are frank and unapologetic about his promiscuity and his HIV-positive status.
Not all of his works center on gay themes. His debut Forgetting Elena (1973) is set on an imaginary island. The novel can be read as commenting on gay culture, but only in a highly coded and indirect manner. Caracole (1985) centers on heterosexual characters, relationships, and desires. Fanny: A Fiction (2003) is a historical novel about Frances Trollope and Frances Wright. White's play Terre Haute (2006) portrays discussions that take place when a prisoner based on Timothy McVeigh is visited by a writer based on Gore Vidal. (In real life McVeigh and Vidal corresponded but did not meet.)
White has been influential as a literary and cultural critic, particularly on gay issues. He has received many awards and distinctions; among these, he is a Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, an Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and a Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
[edit] Works
[edit] Fiction
- Forgetting Elena (1973)
- Nocturnes for the King of Naples (1978)
- A Boy's Own Story (1982) ISBN 0-525-24128-0
- Caracole (1985)
- The Beautiful Room Is Empty (1988)
- Skinned Alive: Stories (1995)
- The Farewell Symphony (1998)
- The Married Man (2000)
- Fanny: A Fiction (2003)
- Hotel de Dream (forthcoming) [1]
- Chaos: A Novella and Stories (forthcoming) [2]
[edit] Plays
- Terre Haute (2006)
[edit] Nonfiction
- The Joy of Gay Sex, with Charles Silverstein (1977)
- States of Desire (1980)
- The Burning Library: Writings on Art, Politics and Sexuality 1969-1993 (1994)
- The Flâneur: A Stroll Through the Paradoxes of Paris (2000)
- Arts and Letters (2004)
[edit] Biography
- Genet: A Biography (1993)
- Marcel Proust (1998)
[edit] Memoir
- Our Paris: Sketches from Memory (1995)
- My Lives (2006)
[edit] Anthologies
- The Darker Proof: Stories from a Crisis (1987)
- In Another Part of the Forest: : An Anthology of Gay Short Fiction (1994)
- The Art of the Story (2000)
- A Fine Excess: Contemporary Literature at Play (2001)
[edit] Further reading
- Doten, Mark: Interview with Edmund White Bookslut February 2007.
- Edmund White: My Women. Learning how to love them The New Yorker June 13, 2005. Autobiographical article, excerpted from My Lives.
- Morton, Paul. (April 6, 2006) Interview: Edmund WhiteEconoCulture Retrieved April 29, 2006
- Teeman, Tim. (July 29, 2006) Inside a mind set to explode The Times Retrieved January 9, 2007
[edit] See also
- His "A Boy's Own Story" is referred to in Queer As Folk (U.S.) Episode 4.10. Ben Brucker discusses an offscreen White reading with student Anthony.
- Keith McDermott