Alison Lurie

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Alison Lurie (born September 3, 1926) is an American novelist and academic. She won the Pulitzer Prize for her 1984 novel Foreign Affairs. Although better known as a novelist, she has also written numerous non-fiction books, particularly on children's literature and the semiotics of dress.

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[edit] Early life

Lurie was born in Chicago, but grew up in White Plains, New York. She graduated from Radcliffe College in 1947.[1] The next year she married Jonathan Peale Bishop, a graduate student at Harvard. Bishop was a critic and essayist who later become a writer of autobiographically inflected books about Catholic Christianity.

[edit] Novels

Her first novel was Love and Friendship (1962), followed by The Nowhere City in 1965 (about Los Angeles, California, where Lurie lived from 1957 to 1961). Two novels set in New England appeared in 1967 and 1969: Imaginary Friends and Real People, respectively. Imaginary Friends, about a group of people who believe they are communicating with extraterrestrials, was made into a Thames Television series in 1987. In 1974, she released The War Between the Tates, set in a Cornell-like "Corinth University," and this was adapted to a television movie for NBC. Only Children came out in 1979, and it is set in the New England of the 1930s.

Her most famous book, Foreign Affairs, concerns American academics in England, and it was made into a television film. The Truth About Lorin Jones 1989 concerns the efforts of a biographer. The Last Resort 1998 is set in Key West, Florida. Her most recent novel, 'Truth and Consequences,' takes place in a town and university somewhat like Ithaca and Cornell, and centers on two couples coping not too well with the roles of caregiver and caregetter.

[edit] Professional life

In 2001 Lurie published a memoir, Familiar Spirits, recounting a decades-long friendship with poet James Merrill (1926–1995) and his partner David Jackson (1922–2001). Lurie credits Merrill and Jackson for encouraging her writing in the 1950s, a decade during which she suffered many rejections from publishers.

Alison Lurie has also been interested in children's literature, co-editing the Garland Library of Children's Classics (73 vol.) and often reviewing the subject for the New York Review. In 1990 she published Don't Tell the Grown-ups: subversive children's literature. A further collection of essays on children's literature, 'Boys and Girls Forever' appeared in 2004. She taught literature, folklore, and writing at Cornell University from 1968 to 2006,[1], first as a lecturer, becoming a full professor in 1979.[1] Lurie has three children[1] and is currently married to the writer Edward Hower.

[edit] Awards

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d "Biography Profile: Alison Lurie" Marquis Who's Who on the Web
  2. ^ "Retired Cornell professor elected to arts academy" The Post-Standard (Syracuse, New York) 5 May 2005 p. 78

[edit] References

  • Magill, Frank N. (ed.) (1991) "Alison Lurie" Critical Survey of Long Fiction: English Language Series (rev.ed.) Salem Press, Pasadena, California, vol. 5, pp. 2126-2134, ISBN 0-89356-830-9 (vol 5)

[edit] External links

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