Jesse Lee Kercheval

Jesse Lee Kercheval
Born 1956[1]
Fontainebleau, France
Occupation Writer and teacher
Nationality American
Period 1987–present
Genres textbook, novel, nonfiction, poetry, memoir
Notable work(s) The Museum of Happiness, The Dogeater, Space, The Alice Stories


www.jlkercheval.com

Jesse Lee Kercheval is an American academic and writer. She is a writing teacher at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She has authored several books of various genres, notably Building Fiction, The Museum of Happiness, and The Dogeater.

Contents

Biography

Kercheval was born in Fontainebleau, France. Raised in Cocoa, Florida, she attended Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida. She studied with Janet Burroway, David Kirby, and Jerome Stern there. She received her Bachelor of Arts in History at the university in 1983.

Kercheval earned her Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, 1986. She then worked at the DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana, for a year.

She proceeded to the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, and was the founding director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing. She is currently the director of the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing and the Sally Mead Hands Bascom Professor of English. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin with her husband, Dan, their two children, Max and Magda, and a rat terrier.

Works

Short Stories

Kercheval's first published book was a collection of short stories named The Dogeater.[4] The stories include The Dogeater, Underground Women, Willy, A Clean House, Tertiary Care, La Mort au Moyen Age, The History of the Church in America, and A History of Indiana. It is now out of print.

The short story The Dogeater is about an Igorrote man who lived in New Orleans. He was brought to the United States of America for the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair.

Underground Women discusses the poor way women were treated. It was expanded into Kercheval's later novel, The Museum of Happiness. Kercheval got the idea for Underground Women after seeing a woman collapse in a launderette during a trip to Paris.[5]

Novels

The The Museum of Happiness is a story about a young widow and a half-Alsatian, half-German carnival worker as they fall in love in a 1929 Paris. A German translation was published by Wilhelm Heyne Verlag in 1997.

The novel The Alice Stories is about a girl called Alice and her family. She falls in love with Anders Dahl, a Norwegian farmer. Then, their child Maude was born. The novel goes through her life and her biggest challenge.

Nonfiction

Space is Kercheval's memoir about her childhood and the Space Race. It was published by Algonquin Books, and is now out of print.

The writing textbook Building Fiction:How to Develop Plot and Structure was published in 1997, by Story Press, and reissued by the University of Wisconsin-Madison Press. Divided into two parts, it discusses sources for fiction, openings, points-of-view, characters and endings. It also discusses novels, novellas, novels-in-stories and short stories.

Poetry and Chapbooks

Kercheval has altogether published five chapbooks. The first collection was World as Dictionary, published by Carnegie Mellon University Press. The second, Dog Angel, was published by the University of Pittsburgh Press. The third was Chartreuse, which was a chapbook of fiction, nonfiction and poetry. It was published by Hollyridge Press. Likewise, her next chapbook, Film History as a Train Wreck was also a chapbook of mixed genres. It was published by the Center for Book Arts. Finally, her topical collection of poetry, Cinema Muto, was about the age of silent films.

Others

Kercheval also composed a one-page short short story, Carpathia. Published in Chapter 11 of her textbook Building Fiction, this book is about the story of two passengers on board the Carpathia, narrated by their future daughter.

Awards

Her memoir, Space, won the Alex Award from the American Library Association.[6] The Dogeater won the Associated Writing Programs Award 1986 in Short Fiction.[7] The Alice Stories, won the Prairie Schooner Fiction Book Prize.[8][9] Her novella, Brazil, was the winner of the Ruthanne Wiley Memorial Novella Contest.[8] David Wojahn selected her poetry collection Cinema Muto for the Crab Orchard Open Selection Award. The Center for Book Arts Poetry Chapbook Prize 2006 was also won by her chapbook, Film History as a Train Wreck, by Albert Goldbarth.[10]

References