- Leah Hager Cohen
Leah Hager Cohen is an American author who writes both fiction and nonfiction.
Cohen's father was superintendent of the
Lexington School for the Deaf inQueens, New York , and she became fluent in sign language there. She enteredNYU at age 16, intending to study drama, but later transferred toHampshire College to study literature, graduating in1988 . After working as a sign language interpreter for two years, she enteredColumbia Journalism School , graduating in1991 . Deciding she had no interest in being a reporter, she intended to write fiction on the side. An offer from a New York literary agent to publish her nonfiction, but not her short stories, changed her mind.She is probably best known for her debut work, "Train Go Sorry: Inside a Deaf World" (1994), which in part related her own experiences growing up at her father's school. Her other works of nonfiction include "Glass, Paper, Beans: Revelations on the Nature and Value of Ordinary Things", in which she reports on the production of those items from various locations, "The Stuff of Dreams: Behind the Curtain of an American Community Theater", and "Without Apology: Girls, Women, and the Desire to Fight", on female boxers.
She has also written three novels, including [http://www.leahhagercohen.com/nextup.html "House Lights"] , and is currently working on a fourth.
Cohen lives in
Belmont, Massachusetts .External links
* [http://leahhagercohen.com/ LeahHagerCohen.com]
* [http://loveasafoundobject.blogspot.com/ Love As A Found Object] (Blog)
* [http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2007/08/28/in_writing_and_in_life_she_finds_balance/ Boston Globe article on Leah Hager Cohen]
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