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Robin Hemley Director
of the
Nonfiction Writing Program
Robin Hemley has published
seven books of nonfiction and fiction. His latest book, Invented
Eden,
The Elusive, Disputed History of the Tasaday (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux,
2003) deals with a purported anthropological hoax in the Philippines.
James Hamilton Paterson, writing in the London
Review of Books, call Invented Eden, "brave and wholly
convincing." John
Leonard writes in Harpers, "Besides a terrific story, Invented
Eden is a savvy caution." Invented Eden was an American
Library Association's Editor's Choice book for 2003.
Robin Hemley
co-edited the anthology Extreme Fiction:Fabulists and formalists with
Michael Martone (Longman, 2004), and is the author of the memoir, Nola:
A Memoir Of Faith, Art And Madness (Graywolf, 1998), which won an
Independent Press Book Award for Nonfiction. His popular craft book Turning
Life Into Fiction, which was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection
as well as a Quality Paperback Book Club Selection has sold over 40,000
copies and will soon be reissued by Graywolf Press. He is also the author
of the novel, The Last Studebaker (Graywolf) and the story
collections, The
Big Ear (Blair) and All You Can Eat (Atlantic Monthly
Press).
His awards for his fiction include, The Nelson Algren Award from The
Chicago Tribune, The
George Garrett Award for Fiction from Willow Springs, the Hugh J. Luke
Award from Prairie Schooner, two Pushcart Prizes, and many others. He
has published his work in many of the best literary magazines in the
country, including Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, Shenandoah, Willow
Springs, Boulevard, Witness, ACM, North American Review, and many
others. His fiction has been widely anthologized, translated, and heard
on NPR's "Selected
Shorts" and others.
He is a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop and has taught at the University
of North Carolina at Charlotte, Western Washington Univeristy, St. Lawrence
University, Vermont College, and the University of Utah, and in many
Summer writing conferences. He was also the Editor-in-Chief of the Bellingham
Review for five years.
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