Jane Hamilton

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Jane Hamilton (born 13 July 1957) is an American novelist.

Hamilton lives in Rochester, Wisconsin. She grew up in Oak Park, Illinois, the youngest of five children. She graduated from Carleton College in 1979 as an English major.Her first published works were short stories, "My Own Earth" and "Aunt Marj's Happy Ending", both published in Harper's Magazine in 1983. "Aunt Marj's Happy Ending" later appeared in The Best American Short Stories 1984.

Her first novel, The Book of Ruth, was published in 1988 and won the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, Great Lakes College Association New Writers Award, and the Wisconsin Library Association Banta Book Award in 1989.[1] The Book of Ruth was an Oprah's Book Club selection in 1996, and it was the basis for a 2004 television film of the same title.

In 1994, she published A Map of the World, which was adapted for a film in 1999 and, the same year, was also an Oprah's Book Club selection.Her third novel, The Short History of a Prince, published in 1998, was a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1998.[2]In 2000, Hamilton was named a Notable Wisconsin Author by the Wisconsin Library Association.[3]

All of her books are set, at least in part, in Wisconsin. "A Map of the World" is set in Racine County, Wis.

In interview with The Journal Times in Racine, Wis. in November 2006, Hamilton talked about her early inspiration for writing novels. The story goes that as a student at Carleton College, she overheard a professor say she would write a novel one day. Hamilton had only written two short stories for the professor's class. Overhearing the conversation gave her a lot of confidence, according to the interview. "It had a lot more potency, the fact that I overheard it, rather than his telling me directly," she said.


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