- Ann Beattie
Ann Beattie (born
September 8 ,1947 ) is an Americanshort story writer andnovelist . She has received an award for excellence from theAmerican Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and a PEN/Bernard Malamud Award for excellence in the short story form. Her work has been compared to Alice Adams,J.D. Salinger ,John Cheever , andJohn Updike . She holds an undergraduate degree fromAmerican University and a masters degree from theUniversity of Connecticut .Career
Born in
Washington, D.C. , Beattie grew up inChevy Chase, Washington, D.C. . She gained attention in the early 1970s with short stories published in "The Western Humanities Review", "Ninth Letter ", the "Atlantic Monthly ", and "The New Yorker ". Critics have praised her writing for its keen observations and dry, matter-of-fact irony which chronicle disillusionments of the upper-middle-class generation that grew up in the 1960s. In 1976, she published her first book of short stories, "Distortions", and her first novel, "Chilly Scenes of Winter", later made into a film. Beattie's style has evolved over the years. In 1998, she published "Park City" a collection of old and new short stories, about which Christopher Lehman-Haupt wrote in the "New York Times ":[The stories] are arranged chronologically, which allows the reader to trace the development of the author's technique. It also lets one see the contrast between the latest stories and the earliest, an experience of sufficient subtlety and complexity to reduce one in this limited space to the following gross generalizations: Gone is the deadpan style of the early and middle stories, in which Ms. Beattie lays out on a dissecting table the behavior of her disaffected post-counterculture yuppies and then leaves it up to the reader to do the anatomizing. Gone, too, are the stabs of lyricism of the middle period, particularly the endings that try poetically to recapitulate the story's action but feel tacked on and artificial. .. In the best of these stories, Ms. Beattie's ability both to commit herself and to knit her commitment into the finest needlework of her artistry contrasts sharply with the irritating moral passivity of her earlier work. [ Lehman-Haupt, Christopher [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A07E1DE173AF93BA35755C0A96E958260&scp=4&sq=%22park%20city%22%20%22ann%20beattie%22&st=cse "Dissecting Yuppies With Precision"] "
New York Times " (8 June 1998)]Beattie has taught at
Harvard College and the University of Connecticut and presently teaches at theUniversity of Virginia , where she is the Edgar Allan Poe Chair of the Department of English and Creative Writing. In 2005 she was selected as winner of theRea Award for the Short Story , in recognition of her outstanding achievement in that genre.Her first novel, "
Chilly Scenes of Winter " (1976), was adapted as a film alternatively titled "Chilly Scenes of Winter" or "Head Over Heels" in 1979 byJoan Micklin Silver , starring John Heard,Mary Beth Hurt , andPeter Riegert . The first version was not well received by audiences, though upon its re-release in 1982, with a new title and ending, to match that in book, [ [http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/06/28/specials/beattie-chilly.html How 'Chilly Scenes' Was Rescued NY Times, October 10, 1982] ] the movie was success, and is now considered a comedy classic. [ [http://www.tcm.com/thismonth/article.jsp?cid=157042&mainArticleId=157039 Turner Classic Movies, Cult Movies Showcase] ]Personal
She is married to painter Lincoln Perry. In 2005 the two collaborated on a published retrospective of Perry's paintings. Entitled "Lincoln Perry's Charlottesville", the book contains an introductory essay and artist's interview by Beattie. [cite news |url= http://www.readthehook.com/Stories/2006/01/05/facetimeSceneMastersPerryB.html |title= Scene masters: Perry, Beattie book it back to town |date=2006-01-05 |accessdate=2006-12-20 |publisher=
The Hook weekly ] She was previously married to writer David Gates.Bibliography
hort Story Collections
*"Distortions" (1976); ISBN 0679732357
*"Secrets and Surprises" (1978); ISBN 0679731938
*"The Burning House" (1982); ISBN 067976500X
*"What Was Mine" (1991); ISBN 0517105411
*"Where You’ll Find Me and Other Stories" (1993); ISBN 074322678X
*"Park City" (1998); ISBN 0679781331
*"Perfect Recall" (2000); ISBN 0743211707
*"Follies: New Stories" (2005); ISBN 0743269624Novels
*"
Chilly Scenes of Winter " (1976)
*"Falling in Place" (1981); ISBN 067973192X
*"Love Always" (1986); ISBN 0394744187
*"Picturing Will" (1990); ISBN 051708094X
*"Another You" (1995); ISBN 0517173867
*"My Life, Starring Dara Falcon" (1997); ISBN 0517289199
*"The Doctor's House" (2002); ISBN 0743235010Notes
External links
* [http://www.kwls.org/lit/kwls_blog/2008/09/ann_beattie_ambient_sound_2008.cfm .mp3 recording of Ann Beattie reading from an essay on ambient sound in the works of Joyce, Yates, and Carver. (Key West Literary Seminar 2008)]
* [http://www.engl.virginia.edu/faculty/beattie.html Beattie's page at the University of Virginia]
* [http://wiredforbooks.org/annbeattie/ 1985, 1991 interviews with Ann Beattie] byDon Swaim atWired for Books
* [http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2005/09/12/050912fi_fiction?printable=true Online "New Yorker" story "Coping Stones"]
* [http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/04/12/040412fi_fiction?printable=true Online "New Yorker" story "The Rabbit Hole As Likely Explanation"]
* [http://www.laurahird.com/newreview/parkcity.html Review of "Park City"]
* [http://www.kcrw.com/etc/programs/bw/bw981001ann_beattie/media_player_archives?action=listen Ann Beatie discusses her writing process on Bookworm in October, 1998]
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