Kyle Smith (writer)
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Kyle Smith | |
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Born | 1966 East Longmeadow, MA, USA |
Occupation | Novelist, Critic, Journalist |
Nationality | American |
Genres | Comic novel |
Subjects | Fiction |
Spouse(s) | Sara Austin (2007–present) |
Influences
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Kyle Smith is an American novelist, critic and essayist. He is a staff film critic[1] for the New York Post.[2] His film reviewing style has been called "an exercise in hilarious hostility" by Entertainment Weekly.[3] He has also contributed to The Wall Street Journal,[4][5][6] People magazine,[7] New York magazine, The New York Times,[8][9] and The Weekly Standard.[10]
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[edit] Personal life
[edit] Marriage
Smith married Sara Austin in 2007.
[edit] Education
Smith, who graduated Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Yale University,[11] is a former U.S. Army lieutenant and veteran of the Persian Gulf War.[12][13] From 1996 to 2005 he worked at People magazine, where he was the editor of the book and music reviews.[14]
[edit] Publications
Kyle Smith has published two books in addition to criticism, newspaper and magazine features and essays.
[edit] Books
[edit] Love Monkey
His first book, Love Monkey, a comic novel about a cynical, self-deprecating journalist named Tom Farrell[15] and his romantic tribulations in New York City, was published by William Morrow[16] in 2004.[17] A New York Times article[18] cast the book as a guys' version of such popular novels as Bridget Jones's Diary and Melissa Bank's, The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing and cited Nick Hornby's books About a Boy and High Fidelity as inspiration for Love Monkey. Times critic Janet Maslin called the book "hilarious".[19] Entertainment Weekly called the book "relentlessly cynical" and concluded that "'Monkey,' like the paper Tom writes for, is loud and brash, but a helluva lot of fun".[20] Time magazine said, "You couldn't ask for a more entertaining drinking buddy--watch out for a memorable strip-club meltdown scene--but there's a deep, dark subway of despair running underneath his riffs, and that's what makes the book more than a standup routine....'Love Monkey' nails it."[21].
[edit] Reception and Critical Acclaim
The New Yorker: "In this chronicle of four and a half months in the life of a hapless, single city-dweller, Smith blends hilarity and cynicism in order to adapt the Bridget Jones formula to a male perspective. A brief detour into a post-9/11 subplot somewhat arrests the comic flow, but it is actually one of the book's most interesting sections, and imparts to the hectic seduction games a nagging sense of unease, along with some genuine insight into the dilemmas of daily journalism."[22].
The San Francisco Chronicle said of Love Monkey that "Kyle Smith's exceedingly readable and wickedly funny romantic comedy reads sort of like a 'chick flick' for guys but should be required reading for young women, too, with the peek it gives into the male psyche....Smith...is a natural storyteller with an extraordinarily keen ear for dialogue that is real, hip and witty without being too much so - no small feat. His fresh metaphors are laced with funny pop culture references and his characterization is so good I felt as if I was reading about my own friends, as well as myself, at times. One of the most surprising delights of the book is how completely Smith gets women -- what they want, what they're sensitive about, what turns them on, and more. And in getting these things he also reveals many of the female sex's hypocrisies -- how we are often guilty of the very superficialities we accuse men of."[23]
CNN wrote of Love Monkey, "Watch out guys, someone is spilling our secrets...'Love Monkey' has been called a male version of Sex and the City and an American version of Nick Hornby's High Fidelity. It is an achingly accurate depiction of a thirty-something single man....an engaging romp through the mind of a single guy -- at times laugh-out-loud funny, at times endearingly touching. The first-time author...understands the life his protagonist is leading and pulls no punches as he exposes the inner life of the 21st-century single guy."[24]
On NPR's "Fresh Air", critic Maureen Corrigan said, "What's hippest about 'Love Monkey is the deft way it resurrects and updates the Dorothy Parker style of talking about New York: brittle, shrewd, self-deprecating, and oh-so-witty. Smith's ruthless humor knows no bounds".[25][26]
[edit] TV adaptation
On January 17, 2006,[27] a one-hour CBS TV series based on the book debuted; it was a dramedy also called Love Monkey. It starred Tom Cavanagh, Judy Greer, Jason Priestley and Larenz Tate.[28] The show aired on CBS in January-February 2006 and on VH1 in April-May 2006.[29]
[edit] A Christmas Caroline
His second novel, A Christmas Caroline,[30] was published in 2006, also by William Morrow. Writing in The Wall Street Journal, critic Joseph Bottum said, "For those who prefer their sentimentality seasoned with a dash of cynical wit, Kyle Smith's A Christmas Caroline may be a good selection. Mr. Smith...turns in a quick, enjoyable read about a selfish woman at a fashion magazine who is taught the true meaning of Christmas by three spooky visitors. From the moment you meet Caroline's assistant--a devious redhead named Ursula Heep--you know you're at play in the fields of Charles Dickens....Mr. Smith takes Dickens' old, familiar tale and stuffs it into a woman straight out of The Devil Wears Prada".[31].
[edit] References
- ^ Metacritic: Movie Reviews by Critic and Publication
- ^ Movie Reviews | Current | Movie Critics - New York Post
- ^ Reviewing the Reviews: 'Catch and Release' | PopWatch Blog | EW.com
- ^ The Wall Street Journal Online - Taste Commentary
- ^ http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/wsj/access/1190178221.html?dids=1190178221:1190178221&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Jan+6%2C+2007&author=Kyle+Smith&pub=Wall+Street+Journal&edition=Eastern+edition&startpage=P.12&type=8_90&desc=PURSUITS
- ^ http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/wsj/access/1187403991.html?dids=1187403991:1187403991&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Dec+30%2C+2006&author=Kyle+Smith&pub=Wall+Street+Journal&edition=Eastern+edition&startpage=P.6&type=8_90&desc=PURSUITS
- ^ BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Corrosive Characters in Two Novels About Journalists - New York Times
- ^ "Metropolitan Diary", December 11, 1996, New York Times
- ^ "Metropolitan Diary", May 10, 1998, The New York Times
- ^ The Weekly Standard
- ^ Sara Austin, Kyle Smith - New York Times
- ^ Bookreporter.com - Author Profile: Kyle Smith
- ^ The Wall Street Journal Online - Leisure & Arts
- ^ BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Corrosive Characters in Two Novels About Journalists - New York Times
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000G740PS/ Love Monkey
- ^ William Morrow - from HarperCollins Publishers
- ^ Kyle Smith from HarperCollins Publishers
- ^ Bad Boyz II - New York Times
- ^ BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Corrosive Characters in Two Novels About Journalists - New York Times
- ^ Love Monkey | Book Review | Entertainment Weekly
- ^ You've Got Male - TIME
- ^ Love Monkey: The New Yorker
- ^ Boy meets girl, boy chases girl, boy doesn't get girl
- ^ CNN.com - Review: 'Love Monkey' funny, revealing - Apr 6, 2004
- ^ Maureen Corrigan: New York City Books : NPR
- ^ Love Monkey: A Novel by Kyle Smith
- ^ Love Monkey | TV Review | Entertainment Weekly
- ^ Love Monkey | TV Review | Entertainment Weekly
- ^ ‘Love Monkey’ finds new life on VH1 - TV comedy - MSNBC.com
- ^ Amazon.com: A Christmas Caroline: A Novel: Kyle Smith: Books
- ^ http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/wsj/access/1181441871.html?dids=1181441871:1181441871&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Dec+16%2C+2006&author=Joseph+Bottum&pub=Wall+Street+Journal&edition=Eastern+edition&startpage=P.10&type=91_1996&desc=PURSUITS