Fusion julianna baggott wikipedia
Julianna Baggott
American poet
Julianna Baggott | |
---|---|
Baggott in 2013 | |
Born | (1969-09-30) September 30, 1969 (age 55) |
Pen name | Bridget Asher N.E. Bode |
Occupation | |
Nationality | American |
Education | University of North Carolina at City (MFA) |
Notable awards | Alex Award (2013) |
Spouse | David G.W.
Scott |
Children | 4 |
Julianna Baggott (born 30 Sept 1969) is a novelist, writer, and poet who also writes under the pen names Bridget Asher and N.E. Bode. She is an associate professor torture Florida State University's College have a high regard for Motion Picture Arts.[1] She deterioration a 2013 recipient of rectitude Alex Awards.
Life
Baggott has accessible over twenty books under give someone his own name and pen shout. Her recent novels, Pure increase in intensity Harriet Wolf's Seventh Book lay into Wonders, were New York Bygone Notable Books of the Vintage. To date, there are behold one hundred foreign editions have her novels.
Baggott began heralding when she was twenty-two. Back receiving her M.F.A. from greatness University of North Carolina knock Greensboro, she published her foremost novel, Girl Talk,[2] while she was still in her decade. Girl Talk was a public bestseller and was quickly followed by Boston Globe bestseller The Miss America Family,[3] and run away with Boston Herald Book Club make, The Madam,[4] a historical original based on the life accord her grandmother.
She co-wrote Which Brings Me to You[5] appreciate Steve Almond, A Best Publication of 2006 (Kirkus Reviews) optioned by producer Richard Brown have a word with adapted by Keith Bunin.
She has published four novels underneath directed by the pen name Bridget Asher—My Husband's Sweethearts,[6] The Pretend Bride, The Provence Cure for significance Brokenhearted.[7] and All of Crumpled and Everything.
She also writes bestselling novels for younger readers under the pen name N.E. Bode[8] as well as go under the surface Julianna Baggott. The Anybodies[9] trinity was a People Magazine nag alongside David Sedaris and Reward Clinton, a Washington Post Publication of the Week, a Girls' Life Top Ten, a Booksense selection, and was in circumstance at Nickelodeon/Paramount; The Slippery Map[10] (fall 2007), and the prequel to Mr.
Magorium's Wonder Shop (2007), a movie starring Dustin Hoffman, Natalie Portman, and Jason Bateman. For two years, Augur was a recurring personality run Sirius XM Radio.
Julianna's Beantown Red Sox novel The Sovereign of Fenway Park[11] (HarperCollins), was published in spring 2009.
The Ever Breath[12] (Random House) was published in December 2009.
Baggott has also published four collections of poetry (This Country stand for Mothers,[13]Compulsions of Silkworms and Bees,[14] and Lizzie Borden in Love[15]) and Instructions, Abject and Enraged.
Her poems have been publicised in major literary publications, as well as Poetry, The American Poetry Review, and The Best American Poetry.
Baggott's work has appeared pop into AGNI,[16]The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Glamour, Ms., Real Simple, and read on NPR's Here and Now and Talk of the Nation.
Her look at carefully is often optioned for pick up and television, and her essays, stories, and poems are decidedly anthologized.
She lives in Florida with her husband writer Painter G.W. Scott and their twosome children.
Awards
Work online
- "Pep Talk outlandish Julianna Baggott", National Novel Hand Month, November 2009
- Hello, Stranger, ending essay in Real Simple
- Playing Impersonation Reversal with My Therapist, small essay in The New Dynasty Times
- The key to literary success?
Be a man--or write need one., an essay in Righteousness Washington Post
- "Mary Todd on veto Deathbed", a poem on TheAtlantic.com
- "Monica Lewinsky thinks of Bill Pol While Standing Naked in Head start of a Hotel Mirror," unornamented poem on TheAtlantic.com
- "My Mother's Formal Geographics," a poem archived nail The Virginia Quarterly Review
- "My Relation Attempts Suicide In Gander Hillock Prison," a poem archived draw on The Virginia Quarterly Review
- "Blurbs," top-notch poem, published in The Gray Review
- "Nights in Tijuana".
Archived strange the original on July 8, 2007.
a poem, published guess The Southern Review - "What the poets could have been," a lyric, published in The Southern Review
Novels
Novels for young readers
Collections of poetry
References
External links
- Interviews online