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Writer
and Editor
Benaroya Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday,
April 27, 2004
Underwritten
by University Book Store
Biography
Anne Fadiman
is an author, essayist, editor, and teacher. Her best-selling book Ex
Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader is a collection of essays originally
published in the Library of Congress's Civilization magazine, where Fadiman
served as one of the founding editors. It is a book entirely about booksfrom
the purchasing of them, to the reading of them, to the handling of them
(always write in the margins; go ahead and crack the spines; pay no mind
if you drop crumbs between the pages; shelve American literature alphabetically
by author, English literature chronologically). The London Observer called
Ex Libris "witty, enchanting, and supremely well-written." It
has been or will be translated into thirteen languages, including Korean
and Catalan.
The Spirit
Catches You and You Fall Down (1997), Fadiman's first book, chronicles
the trials of an epileptic Hmong child and her family living in Merced,
California. Fadiman's sensitive, incisive treatment of the unbreachable
gulf between the Hmong and American medical systems won her a National
Book Critics Circle Award. The Washington Post called the book "an
intriguing, spirit-lifting, extraordinary exploration."
Her essays
and articles have appeared in Harper's, The New Yorker, and The New York
Times, among many other publications. She has won National Magazine Awards
for both reporting and essays. Anne Fadiman is the editor of the 2003
edition of Best American Essays.
Anne Fadiman
also edits The American Scholar, a literary quarterly that has been published
since 1932. In 2005 she will begin an appointment as the first Francis
Writer in Residence at Yale.
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