Meredith Maran

Meredith Maran
Meredith Maran
Meredith Maran
Born 1951, August 21
New York
Occupation Journalist, novelist, essayist, critic, People Magazine stringer
Alma mater Bronx High School of Science
Period 1957 - Present
Genres Memoir, Non-Fiction, Features, Essays, Autobiography, Fiction
Notable work(s) My Lie (San Francisco Chronicle “Best Book of 2010”), Dirty (San Francisco Chronicle “Best Book of 2003”), Ben & Jerry’s Double Dip (National Bestseller), Class Dismissed (San Francisco Chronicle bestseller 2000), What It’s Like to Live Now (San Francisco Chronicle bestseller, 1995).
Spouse(s) Katrine Thomas
Children Peter Graham, Jesse Graham
Relative(s) Josie Maran (niece), supermodel, actress, eco-entrepreneur, CEO of Josie Maran Cosmetics

meredithmaran.com

Meredith Maran (born 1951, in New York) is a journalist and writer. She has written eight books, several of them San Francisco Chronicle best-sellers. She writes features, essays, and book reviews for People, Self, Real Simple, Vibe, Ladies Home Journal and Mother Jones and contributes regularly to Salon.com, the San Francisco Chronicle, Family Circle and More magazines. Maran’s storytelling is regarded as colorful, compelling, sympathetic, and evocative.[1] Her memoir, My Lie, has been described as a persuasive, compelling critique of media and psychology.[2]

Contents

Work

Maran's first memoir, Chamisa Road, was published in 1971 by Random House. Her second book, How Would You Feel If Your Dad Was Gay?, was published in 1991 by Alyson Press. The book is a children's book about gay/lesbian issues.

What It’s Like To Live Now was published in 1995 by Bantam. It captures the contradictions and ambiguities of the modern American experience. Maran's fourth book, Ben & Jerry’s Double Dip, was published in 1997 by Simon & Schuster. What It's Like To Live Now became a Bay Area Bestseller. Ben & Jerry's Double Dip became a national bestseller.

Notes From An Incomplete Revolution was published in 1997, by Bantam. The book is written in first-person, with the narrator acknowledging the limitations and failings of feminism while still rejoicing in the power of the women's movement.

Maran’s book, Class Dismissed, was published by St. Martin's Press in 2000. The book presents an account of the stark realities of public education via a year in the lives of three high school seniors from Berkeley High.[3] Class Dismissed was praised by critics and spent 15 weeks on the San Francisco Chronicle bestseller list.[4]

Dirty, which explores the causes and consequences of America’s teenage drug epidemic, was published in 2003, by HarperSanFrancisco. The book brings the reader face-to-face with seventeen-year-old Mike, whose life revolves around selling, smoking, and snorting speed; fifteen-year-old Tristan, the boy next door who cannot get enough pot, pills, or vodka; and sixteen-year-old Zalika, a runaway, crack dealer, and prostitute since the age of twelve. In Dirty, Maran combines powerful on-the-street reporting, groundbreaking research, and compassion, to showcase the anguish and resilience of teenagers in trouble.

According to Psychology Today:

"Dirty is eye-opening and compassionately delivered...a sympathetic evocation of ecstasy, heartbreak, horror, and hope. Provocatively revealing, informative, and not without humor, Dirty is itself an addictive read."[5]

My Lie, published in 2010 by John Wiley & Sons, is a memoir which recounts the sex-abuse panic spread across the U.S., during the 1980s and 1990s. Maran’s refusal to whitewash her own behavior, her ability to expose all sides of the issue, and her compassion for the abused as well as those still falsely imprisoned as abusers opens up a dialogue about memory, belief, and past- and present-day culture that is both riveting and important.[6] Maran is especially credible because of the number of years she spent working in the child abuse prevention area.[7]

According to the National Center for Reason and Justice:

"It’s about time someone such as [Meredith Maran] wrote a book like [My Lie]. I urge anyone interested in late 20th century culture, gender conflicts, social influence, and human suggestibility to read My Lie."[8]

My Lie was named a San Francisco Chronicle “Best Book of 2010,” and San Francisco Chronicle “Notable New Book”.[9]

Biography

Maran published her first national magazine article at age 15 and her first book at age 18. After a brief stint in Silicon Valley, Maran became Editor of the Banana Republic Magalog, then created award-winning socially responsible marketing campaigns for companies including Ben & Jerry's, Working Assets, Stonyfield Farm, Smith & Hawken, and Odwalla.

In addition to writing books, features, essays, and book reviews, Maran has been a keynote speaker at venues including the 2008 SNAP Conference, the California Writer's Club, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Charles Schwab Foundation, Stanford University, UC Berkeley, Educators for Social Responsibility, and the Education Writers of America. From 2004-2006 she was Writer in Residence at UCLA. In 2006 she was Writer in Residence at the Mabel Dodge Luhan House in Taos.

In an interview with TIME.com, Maran explained how and why she decided to write her memoir, My Lie.[10] She explained that in 2007, a hiking acquaintance had asked if she had ever done anything she still regretted. Maran replied that she had accused her father of molesting her, and hadn’t spoken to him for eight years. Maran [later] realized that the accusation wasn’t true. Maran’s hiking acquaintance said that exactly the same thing had happened to her. That prompted Maran to address the examples and abuses that included false accounts—and the pain and suffering inflicted on people who were innocent like her father—in order to answer the question: “How could it happen that people who never suffered such harrowing experiences would come to believe that they had?”[11]

Bibliography

Anthologies

  • Travelers’ Tales San Francisco (1996)
  • Women on the Verge (1999)
  • I Do, I Don’t (Queers on Marriage) (2004)
  • Roar Softly and Carry a Great Lipstick (2004)
  • Why I’m Still Married (2006)
  • About Face: Women Write About What They See When They Look In The Mirror (2008)
  • Dirty Words (A Literary Encyclopedia of Sex) (2008)
  • Behind The Bedroom Door (2008)
  • One Big Happy Family (2009)
  • Are We Born Racist? (2010)
  • The Compassionate Instinct (2010)

Books

  • Chamisa Road (1970)
  • How Would You Feel If Your Dad Was Gay? (1991)
  • What It’s Like To Live Now (1995)
  • Ben & Jerry’s Double Dip (1997)
  • Notes From An Incomplete Revolution (1997)
  • Class Dismissed: A Year In The Life of an American High School (2000)
  • Enough About You (2003)
  • Dirty: A Search for Answers Inside America’s Teenage Drug Epidemic (2003)
  • 50 Ways To Support Lesbian and Gay Equality (2005)
  • My Lie: A True Story of False Memory (2010)
  • A Theory of Small Earthquakes (2012)

Articles and Reviews

Awards and recognition

  • Keynote speaker at venues including the 2008 SNAP Conference, the California Writer's Club, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Charles Schwab Foundation, Stanford University, UC Berkeley, Educators for Social Responsibility, and the Education Writers of America.
  • Writer in Residence at UCLA (2004–2006). Residencies at Yaddo, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Mesa Refuge, and Ragdale.
  • San Francisco Chronicle “Best Book of 2010,” and San Francisco Chronicle “Notable New Book” (MY LIE)
  • San Francisco Chronicle “Best Book of 2003” (DIRTY)
  • San Francisco Chronicle Bestseller (DIRTY, CLASS DISMISSED)
  • San Francisco Chronicle Bestseller (WHAT IT’S LIKE TO LIVE NOW)

Interviews

References

  1. ^ Book Review: DIRTY. [1] Psychology Today. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  2. ^ John Hockenberry (2010). [2] NPR . Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  3. ^ Book Review: Class Dismissed. [3] Publishers Weekly (starred review). Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  4. ^ Class Dismissed. [4] Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  5. ^ Book Review: DIRTY. [5] Psychology Today . Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  6. ^ Caroline Leavitt. "Her false memories fuel painful memoir". boston.com. http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2010/09/21/in_my_lie_her_false_memories_fuel_painful_memoir/. Retrieved February 1, 2011. 
  7. ^ "FMS Foundation Newsletter, Winter, 2011, Volume 20 No. 1". FMS Foundation. http://fmsfonline.org/currentnewsletter.html. Retrieved February 1, 2011. 
  8. ^ Mark Pendergrast. "Mark Pendergrast’s Review of My Lie". National Center for Reason and Justice. http://ncrj.org/mark-pendergrasts-review-of-my-lie/. Retrieved January 31, 2011. 
  9. ^ "My Lie, Meredith Maran, Press". http://www.meredithmaran.com/MyLie.htm. Retrieved January 31, 2011. 
  10. ^ Maia Szalavitz (October 18, 2010). "Mind Reading: An Author Takes Back Her Accusation of Incest". TIME.com: Healthland. http://healthland.time.com/2010/10/18/mind-reading-an-author-takes-back-her-accusation-of-incest/. Retrieved February 2, 2011. 
  11. ^ Maia Szalavitz (October 18, 2010). "Mind Reading: An Author Takes Back Her Accusation of Incest". TIME.com: Healthland. http://healthland.time.com/2010/10/18/mind-reading-an-author-takes-back-her-accusation-of-incest/. Retrieved February 2, 2011. 

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Attack therapy — is a controversial type of psychotherapy evolved from ventilation therapy. It involves highly confrontational interaction between the patient and a therapist, or between the patient and fellow patients during group therapy, in which the patient… …   Wikipedia

  • Ben Cohen (businessman) — Ben Cohen (b. March 18 1951 in Brooklyn, New York), is a co founder of the ice cream company Ben Jerry s. cite web |url=http://www.benjerry.com/our company/about us/our history/benbio.cfm |title=Ben Cohen Co Founder Of Ben Jerry’s Ice Cream… …   Wikipedia

  • Jerry Greenfield — in 2010 Born March 14, 1951(1951 03 14) Merrick, New York, U.S. Nationality …   Wikipedia

  • Berkeley High School (Berkeley, California) — Infobox Secondary school name = Berkeley High School established = type = Public secondary grades = 9–12 city = Berkeley state = California country = USA district = Berkeley Unified School District principal = Jim Slemp enrollment = 3,384 mascot …   Wikipedia

  • Forum at Grace Cathedral — The Forum at Grace Cathedral is a live, weekly talk show based in San Francisco, California. The Forum presents thought provoking and engaging conversations on critical issues. The Forum features many of today s top authorities from the world of… …   Wikipedia

  • Альянсы геев и гетеросексуалов — Флаг альянса, новости, флаеры на доске объявлений школы Альянсы геев и гетеросексуалов (англ. Gay straight alliances, GSAs, «гей стрейт альянсы»)  это независимые от государства и школьных ад …   Википедия

  • Liste de zoologistes — Attention, il n est pas d usage en zoologie d utiliser d abréviation pour les noms des auteurs (contrairement aux usages de la botanique, voir ici). Cette liste ne constitue pas une liste officielle. Nous attirons l attention du lecteur sur son… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Christie Brinkley — At the Tribeca Film Festival (April 25, 2007). Born Christie Lee Hudson February 2, 1954 (1954 02 02) (ag …   Wikipedia

  • Elle Macpherson — in 2009 Born Eleanor Nancy Gow 29 March 1964 (1964 03 29) (age 47) Killara …   Wikipedia

  • Marisa Miller — signing autographs at The Mirage Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. April 24, 2009. Born Marisa Lee Bertetta August 6, 1978 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”