Brenda Wineapple

Brenda Wineapple is an American nonfiction writer, literary critic, and essayist. Her books include White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson; Hawthorne: A Life; Sister Brother Gertrude and Leo Stein; and Genêt: A Biography of Janet Flanner. A regular contributor to The New York Times Book Review, The Nation and other national publications, she is also the editor of The Selected Poetry of John Greenleaf Whittier (a volume in the Library of America's American Poets Project) and Nineteenth-Century American Writers on Writing (a volume in The Writers’ World, ed. Edward Hirsch).

Wineapple has received a Pushcart Prize, a Guggenheim fellowship, a fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies, and two National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships. She has also been a Donald C. Gallup Fellow at the Beinecke Library, Yale University, and a fellow of the Indiana Institute of Arts and Letters. Presently a fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities at NYU, she is a past president of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society and a literary advisor for the Library of America and for the Guggenheim foundation.

Wineapple is the former Director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography at The Graduate School, CUNY.[1] She also teaches in the MFA programs at The New School University and Columbia University's School of the Arts and has taught at Sarah Lawrence College and Union College, where she was Washington Irving Professor of Modern Literary and Historical Studies.

Genêt
In 1989, Wineapple published her first book Genêt: A Biography of Janet Flanner with Ticknor and Fields (paperback, University of Nebraska Press, 1992.)[2] May Sarton called it “wonderfully perceptive and moving,” and Kay Boyle wrote "how Brenda Wineapple understood Genêt and her times is almost uncanny. She writes of them with clarity and accuracy in a style that is almost startling in its simplicity." Genêt is the first and only biography of the woman who wrote “The Paris Letter” for The New Yorker for fifty years, since its founding in 1925.

Sister Brother
"A dramatically compelling story," according to the Washington Post, Sister Brother Gertrude and Leo Stein (Putnam’s, 1996, Univ. of Nebraska 1997) is a dual biography of the complex, doomed relationship between Gertrude Stein and her brother Leo, whose collection of modern art was unparalleled and whose salon in Paris was the celebrated gathering place of writers and artists.[3] This book was an Editor’s Choice of the Los Angeles Times and hailed by poet Richard Howard as “a luminous, harrowing achievement for which all students of literature and art, as well as of families! are in Brenda Wineapple’s debt.”

Hawthorne
Hawthorne: A Life (Knopf, 2003, Random House 2004) won the Ambassador Award of the English-speaking Union for the Best Biography of 2003, the Julia Ward Howe Prize from the Boston Book Club, and was listed as one of the Best Books of 2003 by The Providence Journal, The San Francisco Chronicle, and Newsday, among other publications. Robert D. Richardson called it “a brilliant, powerful, nervy, unsettling, and riveting book. With the possible exception of Herman Melville, no one has ever understood the grand, tragic Shakespearian nature of Hawthorne’s life and work as well as Brenda Wineapple.”

White Heat
Called "trenchant" in The New Yorker, "a tour de force" in The Washington Post, and "captivating" by Time Magazine, White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson (Knopf 2008/Anchor Vintage 2009) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award, a winner of the Marfield Prize for Arts Writing, and a New York Times "Notable Book.” It was named one of the Best Books of 2008 by The Times Literary Supplement, The Washington Post, The Economist, The Christian Science Monitor, The Providence Journal, and The Kansas City Star, among other publications. White Heat explores for the first time “the quiet drama and elusive tempos of one of the most improbable and fateful authorial friendships in all of American writing.”[4][5]

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