Scott Sanders

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To see the baseball player see Scott Sanders (baseball player)

Scott Russell Sanders (born 1946) is an American novelist and essayist.

Sanders has won acclaim for his skill as a personal essayist. He is a contributing editor to Audubon magazine and won the John Burroughs Natural History Essay Award in 2000. A frequent public lecturer, his essay "The Force of Spirit," which opens his 2000 book of essays by the same title, was first given as a lecture before the Orion Society's Millennium Conference in 1999. The essay later appeared in the Best American Essays 2000 and was the fourth essay of Sanders' to appear in the Best American series. He received the Lannan Literary Award in 1995 for his non-fiction writing and has received the Frederick Bachman Lieber Award for Distinguished Teaching, the highest teaching award given at IU.

Sanders is a distinguished professor of English at Indiana University, where he has taught since 1971. During his career, he has spent sabbatical years as a writer-in-residence at Phillips Exeter Academy, and as a Visiting Professor at University of Oregon and MIT. He is married with two children, Eva and Jesse, both of whom he addresses in letters included in The Force of Spirit.

[edit] Works

Fiction: Novels:

  • 1985 Terrarium (book)
  • 1986 Bad Man Ballad
  • 1988 The Engineer of Beasts
  • 1989 The Invisible Company

Short Story Collections:

  • 1983 Wilderness Plots
  • 1984 Fetching the Dead

Creative Non-Fiction/Essays:

  • 1987 The Paradise of Bombs
  • 1991 In Limestone Country
  • 1993 Staying Put
  • 1993 Secrets of the Universe
  • 1995 Writing from the Center
  • 2000 The Force of Spirit
  • 2006 A Private History of Awe

Children's Books:

  • 1985 Hear the Wind Blow
  • 1998 Hunting for Hope

[edit] References

Scott Russell Sanders home page]