Amy Hempel
Amy Hempel's Collected Short Stories has been selected by the New York Times as one of five "Best Works of Fiction, 2006." Some of her
other accomplishments are enumerated by Wikipedia:
Amy Hempel . . . is a short story writer, journalist and university professor [this year at Syracuse University]. She is a former student of Gordon Lish, in whose
workshop she wrote several of her first stories. Gordon Lish was so impressed with her work that he helped her publish the stories in a book, Reasons to Live
(1985), which includes the story "In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried", one of the most translated, highly respected, widely taught and extensively anthologized
stories of the last quarter century. Hempel has produced three other collections, At the Gates of the Animal Kingdom (1990), which includes the story "The
Harvest"; Tumble Home (1997); and The Dog of the Marriage (2005). She co-edited (with Jim Shepard) Unleashed - Poems by Writers’ Dogs (1995)
which includes contributions by Edward Albee, John Irving, Denis Johnson, Gordon Lish, Arthur Miller and many others. She writes articles, essays and short stories
for such publications as Vanity Fair, Interview, Bomb, GQ, ELLE, Harper's, The Quarterly, and Playboy. Hempel
has also participated in the Juniper Summer Writing Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst's MFA Program for Poets & Writers. In 2006 The Collected
Stories of Amy Hempel was released, a book containing all four of her original released works.
Generally termed a "minimalist" writer, along with Raymond Carver and Mary Robison, Hempel is one of a handful of writers who has built a reputation based solely
on short fiction. Her work has been exalted by the likes of Chuck Palahniuk, T.C. Boyle, and David Sedaris. Palahniuk wrote of her work: "Every sentence isn't just
crafted, it's tortured over. Every quote and joke, what Hempel tosses out comedian-style, is something funny or profound enough you'll remember it for years. The
same way, I sense, Hempel has remembered it, held onto it, saved it for a place where it could really shine. Scary jewelry metaphor, but her stories are studded and
set with these compelling bits. Chocolate chip cookies with no bland "cookie" matrix, just nothing but chips and chopped walnuts."
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