Larry Smith (editor)

Larry Smith
Born September 17, 1968 (1968-09-17) (age 43)
New Jersey
Occupation Non-fiction writer, editor
Nationality American
Genres Six-Word Memoirs
Notable work(s)

Not Quite What I Was Planning",

"Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak"
Spouse(s) Piper Eressea Kerman

Larry Smith (born September 17, 1968, in New Jersey) is an American author and editor, and publisher of SMITH Magazine. He is best known for developing the "Six-Word Memoir" a literary subgenre that took on a life of its own in popular culture as publications began holding reader contests and publishing the results.[1] The form has been described as "American haiku."[2] Smith credits Ernest Hemingway's reputed shortest story, "For sale: baby shoes, never worn,” with inspiring the viral literary movement.[3]

Contents

Background and early career

Smith grew up in New Jersey, the son of Burlington attorney Louis Smith and his wife Carol, a clinical social worker.[4]

He worked as a founding editor of the magazine P.O.V. and editor-in-chief of its sister publication, Egg, as well as an editor of Might magazine with Dave Eggers. He was also managing editor of the news service AlterNet.[5] and editor of the city guide network, Boulevards.

Smith also worked as executive editor of Yahoo! Internet Life, senior editor at ESPN The Magazine, and articles editor at Men's Journal. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Popular Science, Men’s Health, Salon, Slate, and other places.

In 2004, Smith's wife, Piper Kerman, a graduate of Smith College, had the unlikely experience during their engagement of serving a 15-month sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution, Danbury, CT, the result of a 1998 arrest for drug-related offense committed about five years prior. Smith visited her in prison most every weekend, and wrote about the experience in the New York Times.[6][7][8] She wrote a book about the experience, Orange Is The New Black: My Year In A Women's Prison.[9]

SMITH Magazine and Six Word Memoirs

On January 6, 2006, National Smith Day, Smith co-founded the online SMITH Magazine with Tim Barkow.[10]

Two years later, Smith's book, Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure, co-edited by Rachel Fershleiser, was selected as a Top 100 Editors' Pick by Amazon in 2008 and became a New York Times bestseller. Smith and Fershleiser went on to co-edit three more books in the series, including Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak, I Can't Keep My Own Secrets: Six-Word Memoirs by Teens Famous & Obscure, and It All Changed in an Instant: More Six-Word Memoirs by Teens Famous & Obscure, all published by Harper Perennial.

Books

Notes

References

External links