Jayne
Anne Phillips was born and raised in West Virginia. Her first book
of stories, Black
Tickets, published in 1979 when she was 26, won the prestigious
Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction, awarded by the American Academy and
Institute of Arts and Letters. Featured in Newsweek, Black Tickets
was pronounced "stories unlike any in our literature . . . a crooked beauty"
by Raymond Carver and established Phillips as an writer "in love with the
American language." She was praised by Nadine Gordimer as "the best short
story writer since Eudora Welty" and Black Tickets has since become
a classic of the short story genre.
Machine
Dreams, Phillips' first novel, published in 1984, elegantly and
astutely observes one American family from the turn of the century through
the Vietnam War. A New York Times best seller, Machine Dreams was
nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award and chosen by the
New York Times Book Review as one of twelve BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR.
Her next book
of stories, Fast
Lanes, (1987), praised in the LA times as "stories that hover on
the edge of poetry," is being re-issued by Vintage in April and includes
three previously uncollected stories.
Shelter,
her 1994 novel, a haunting, suspenseful evocation of childhood rite-of-passage,
was awarded an Academy Award in Literature by the American Academy and
Institute of Arts and Letters and chosen one of the Best Books of the Year
by Publishers Weekly.
Jayne Anne
Phillips' works have been translated and published in twelve foreign languages.
She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Endowment
for the Arts Fellowships, and a Bunting Fellowship from the Bunting Institute
of Radcliffe College. Her work has appeared most recently in Harper's,
Granta, Doubletake, and the Norton Anthology of Contemporary
Fiction. She has taught at Harvard University, Williams College, and
Boston University, and is currently Writer In Residence at Brandeis University.
Her triumphant
new novel, MotherKind,
published by Knopf in May, 2000, examines timeless questions of birth and
death.
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