Anne Valente

Anne Valente
Born St. Louis, Missouri
Occupation Short-story writer, essayist, novelist
Language English
Education

Washington University in St. Louis (BA)
University of Illinois (MS)
Bowling Green State University (MFA)

University of Cincinnati (PhD)
Notable works

'By Light We Knew Our Names' (2014)

An Elegy For Mathematics (2013)
Notable awards

Copper Nickel Prize (2012)
Dzanc Short Story Prize (2011)

Notable Story, Best American Non-Required Reading (2011)
Website
www.annevalente.com

Anne Valente’s debut short story collection, By Light We Knew Our Names, won the Dzanc Books Short Story Prize and released in September 2014. She is also the author of the fiction chapbook, An Elegy for Mathematics. Her fiction appears or is forthcoming in One Story, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Ninth Letter, The Normal School, and Iron Horse Literary Review, among others, and won Copper Nickel’s 2012 Fiction Prize. She was the Georges and Anne Borchardt Scholar at the 2014 Sewanee Writers’ Conference and her work was selected as a notable story in Best American Non-Required Reading 2011. Her essays appear in The Believer, Electric Literature and The Washington Post.

In 2016, Anne Valente's debut novel, Our Hearts Will Burn Us Down, will be released by William Morrow/HarperCollins.

Anne Valente teaches creative writing at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design.

Awards

Books

Writing for the Paris Review Daily, Catherine Carberry wrote: "Valente slides between realism and fabulism, and her imaginative leaps alone are noteworthy—but even more so is the heart that beats throughout these stories." [1]

“Whether touching on the epic or the mundane, each of Anne Valente’s stories is a sweeping but precise examination of what it means to be human. These stories can be very painful, and can be very redemptive, but the grace that carries both along is bright and breathtaking. This is an astounding collection from a talented young writer.” -Amber Sparks, author of May We Shed These Human Bodies[2]

“In An Elegy for Mathematics, Valente articulates the strangeness and complexity of everyday emotions with startling precision. These stories are daring, beautiful, and urgent.” -Seth Fried, author of The Great Frustration[3]

Short Stories

References

  1. Carberry, Catherine. "Staff Picks: No Conscience, No Hope, No October". The Paris Review. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  2. Sparks, Amber. "An Elegy for Mathematics". Origami Zoo Press. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  3. Fried, Seth. "An Elegy for Mathematics". Origami Zoo Press. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
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