Danzy Senna

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Danzy Senna (born 1970) is an American writer.

Biography

Early life and education

Danzy Senna was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the middle of three children. Her mother Fanny Howe is an Irish-American poet and novelist. Her father Carl Senna is an Afro-Mexican American scholar, author of The Black Press and the Struggle for Civil Rights and The Fallacy of I.Q.[1]

Senna earned her B.A. from Stanford University and MFA in creative writing from the University of California, Irvine, where she received several creative writing awards.

Marriage and family

Senna lives in Los Angeles with her husband, the novelist Percival Everett. They have two children.

Works

Caucasia

Her first novel, Caucasia (1998), received the Book of the Month Club's Stephen Crane Award for First Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction, and the Alex Award from the American Library Association.[2] The novel was also a finalist for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and was named a Los Angeles Times "Best Book of the Year".[2] Caucasia, also published as From Caucasia with Love, has been translated into eight languages.

Symptomatic

Her second novel, Symptomatic (2004), is a psychological thriller narrated by a biracial young woman who is often accepted as white. The story centers on a college graduate, recently moved to New York City for what promises to be a dream job – a prestigious fellowship writing for a respected magazine. She feels displaced, however, and unsure of how she fits into the world around her. She becomes the object of an older woman's attention: both women share the same skin color. As the older woman's interest turns to obsession, the narrator must figure out what their relationship means to her, even as both their lives seem to spiral out of control.

Where Did You Sleep Last Night?

As a fellow at the New York Public Library’s Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers,[3] Senna composed an autobiographical work, the memoir Where Did You Sleep Last Night?: A Personal History (2009). She recounts the story of her parents, who married in 1968. As the two American writers came from wildly divergent backgrounds: a white woman with a blue-blood Bostonian lineage and a black man, the son of a single mother and an unknown father, their marriage met with opposition. When their marriage disintegrated eight years later, one family friend called it “the ugliest divorce in Boston’s history.” Decades later, Senna looked back not only at her parents’ divorce, but at the histories they tried so hard to overcome. Her often painful journey through the past is epitomized by the question posed to her as a young child by her father: “Don’t you know who I am?”[4]

You Are Free

Her short story collection titled You Are Free (2011) contains eight stories, all of which draw upon Senna's familiar focus on black–white relations. She also contrasts motherhood and non-motherhood.[5] In the title story, a woman’s strange correspondence with a girl claiming to be her daughter leads her into the doubts and what-ifs of the life she hasn’t lived. In another story, "The Care of the Self", a new mother hosts an old friend, still single, and discovers how each of them pities, and envies, the other; in "Admission", tensions arise between a black couple after their son is admitted into the elite daycare school to which they’d applied only as a joke.[5]

Awards

Books

References

  1. Touger, Rebecca (2009). "Interview: Danzy Senna". Smith Magazine (MagSMITH). Retrieved 14 April 2012. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 PBS Program Club (2003). "Matters of Race: Writer bibliographies". Pbs.org. PBS. Retrieved 14 April 2012. 
  3. New York Public Library (2012). "Special Invitation: Danzy Senna in conversation with Rebecca Walker". Nypl.org. New York Public Library. Retrieved 14 April 2012. 
  4. Matthews, David (6 August 2009). "Sunday Book Review: Searching for Father". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 April 2012. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Smith, Zadie (September 2011). "New Books: You Are Free". Harper's (Harper's Foundation) 323 (1,936): 73–76. Retrieved 31 May 2012. (subscription required)

External links

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