Kathryn Davis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kathryn Davis is an award-winning American novelist.
Davis has taught at Skidmore College, and is now senior fiction writer in the Writing Program in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis.
She is a recipient of the Janet Heidiger Kafka Prize, the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1999, a 2000 Guggenheim Fellowship,[1] and a Lannan Literary Award for Fiction in 2006.
Davis lives in Montpelier, Vermont, with her husband, the novelist and essayist Eric Zencey. The couple has one daughter, Daphne, who is a graduate student at Syracuse University.
Novels
- Labrador, (Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1988)
- The Girl Who Trod on a Loaf, (Knopf, 1993)
- Hell, (Ecco, 1998)
- The Walking Tour, (Houghton Mifflin, 1999)
- Versailles, (Houghton Mifflin, 2002)
- The Thin Place, (Little, Brown, 2006)
- Duplex, (Graywolf Press, 2013)
Notes
- ↑ Houghton Mifflin Web site, Weg page titled "Kathryn Davis", accessed December 16, 2006
External links
Biographical information
Reviews
The Thin Place
- "A Tiny World That Teems with Life," Yvonne Zipp in The Christian Science Monitor, January 24, 2006
- "All Creatures Here Below," Lucy Ellmann in The New York Times Book Review, February 5, 2006
- "Resurrection in a town long on violence," Irena Reyn in The San Francisco Chronicle, January 29, 2006
- "The Thin Place," Laura Miller in Salon, January 26, 2006. (subscription required)
- "Milk and Terror: Kathryn Davis Crosses the Border," Joy Press in The Village Voice, January 20, 2006
- "Close Encounters of an Everyday Kind," Julia Lifshin in The Washington Post Book World, March 5, 2006
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